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Elland Power Station was a coal-fired power station situated adjacent to the Manchester to Wakefield railway line and on a loop of the River Calder, north east of the town of Elland in West Yorkshire. The station occupied a site of some 65 acres.
Elland Power Station in 1991. Elland Power Station was a coal-fired power station by the River Calder. It was decommissioned and closed in 1991, in keeping with the trend of generating power at fewer but larger power stations away from towns, and demolished in 1996. [12]
This is a list of current and former electricity-generating power stations in England. For lists in the rest of the UK, including proposed stations, see the see also section below. Note that DESNZ maintains a comprehensive list of UK power stations .
The station was originally opened on 5 October 1840 by the Manchester and Leeds Railway. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It was resited 607 ft (185 m) east on 1 August 1865, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] by which time the line had become part of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway which had taken over the Manchester and Leeds on 9 July 1847. [ 4 ]
Eggborough power station; Elland Power Station; F. Ferrybridge power stations; Foss Island Power Station; Fraisthorpe Wind Farm; G. Glanford Brigg Power Station;
Bury power station; C. Canterbury power station; Carlisle power stations; ... Elland Power Station; Exeter Power Station; F. Fawley Power Station; Ferrybridge power ...
Eggborough power station; Elland Power Station; Eston Grange Power Station; F. Ferrybridge power stations; Fiddler's Ferry power station; Fleetwood power stations;
The first 400 kV line was the 150 mile section between West Burton power station in Nottinghamshire and Sundon substation in Bedfordshire; the line had a capacity of 1,800 MVA per circuit. [3] The first 400 kV substations in Scotland were commissioned in 1972 associated with the line from Hunterston, Ayrshire to Neilston, Renfrewshire.