Approx. 350 Uniper colleagues and contractors worked on site. During an outage, this could be as many as 600 people.
Ratcliffe-on-Soar, the UK’s last coal-fired power station, closed its doors for the final time on 30 September 2024, ending over 140 years of coal-fired generation in the UK.
In Megawatt Valley, nestled near the banks of the Rivers Trent and Soar, Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station occupies a site of approximately 270ha on the A453 adjacent to the East Midlands Parkway railway station.
The Nottinghamshire site started generating in 1967 and played a key role in keeping the nation’s lights on.
Construction began in 1963 with the first of four 500MW units becoming operational on 16 December 1967. Following this, Unit 2 was commissioned on 18 September 1968, Unit 3 on 30 January 1969 and the plant became fully operational with the commission of Unit 4 on 17th October 1970.
On completion, Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station had a capacity of 2GW, enough to power 2 million homes and has played a key role in keeping the nation’s lights on.
Since it began generating in 1967 it has produced enough energy to make more than 21 trillion cups of tea and its eight iconic 114-metre-high cooling towers are a key part of the East Midlands skyline.
Approx. 350 Uniper colleagues and contractors worked on site. During an outage, this could be as many as 600 people.
Ratcliffe has a 2GW generation capacity, which was capable of producing enough electricity to power more than two million homes, (roughly the whole of the East Midlands).
Power sent out to the national grid since 1967 produced enough energy to make more than 1 billion cups of tea per day and over 21 trillion overall (up to 2024).
Ratcliffe has had approx. 141,768 coal deliveries by rail since 1967. The last coal shipment took place on 28 June 2024. GB Rail Freight named one of its locomotives after Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station.
A typical train could deliver up to 15000 tonnes to the power station. At our peak we would receive over 20 trains a day.
Ratcliffe has eight cooling towers which stand at height of 114m with a diameter of 87m at the base and 55m at the summit.
The walls of each tower are approximately 7 inches thick and are made from reinforced draught concrete.
Decommissioning will remove hazards from each plant area before handing over for the next stage of the process. Hazards we will remove are bulk stored oils, chemicals and gases as well as removal of any bulk byproducts and wastes.
If you would like to talk to us about power station site, you can contact our Community Relations Team using the following contact information:
Email us at redevelopment@ratcliffe-uniper.com
Call us on 0115 718 2117
Phone lines are operational between 9.00 am and 17.30pm, Mondays to Fridays (excluding bank holidays). A telephone answering service is available outside of these times.