List of power stations in the Republic of Ireland
This page lists all of the power stations operating in the Republic of Ireland.

Power plants
The table below gives a detailed overview of the fossil-fuel based power plants operating in Ireland in 2017. The data is publicly available and updated annually by the Irish Transmission System Operator (TSO), EirGrid, in its Generation Adequacy Report.[1] In total there was 6609 MW of power plants available in 2017.






| Station | ID | Capacity (MW) | Primary fuel | Secondary fuel | Cycle | Boiler type | Condenser cooling | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aghada [a][2] | AT1 | 90 | Gas | Distillate oil | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Aghada | AT2 | 90 | Gas | Distillate oil | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Aghada | AT4 | 90 | Gas | Distillate oil | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Aghada | AD2 | 431 | Gas | Distillate oil | Combined cycle | Waste heat recovery | Water | 
| All Demand Side Units | DSU | 260 | DSU | n/a | |||
| Dublin Bay | DB1 | 402 | Gas | Distillate oil | Single shaft combined cycle | Waste heat recovery | Seawater | 
| Dublin Waste | 61 | Waste | Water | ||||
| Edenderry [b] | ED1 | 118 | Peat/biomass | n/a | Condensing steam turbine | Bubbling fluidising bed | Water | 
| Edenderry OCGT | ED3 | 58 | Distillate oil | n/a | Open cycle | n/a | Water | 
| Edenderry OCGT | ED5 | 58 | Distillate oil | n/a | Open cycle | n/a | Water | 
| Great Island CCGT | GI4 | 464 | Gas | DO | Combined cycle | HRSG | Water | 
| Huntstown | HNC | 339 | Gas | Distillate oil | Combined cycle | Waste heat recovery | Air | 
| Huntstown | HN2 | 397 | Gas | Distillate oil | Combined cycle | Waste heat recovery | Air | 
| Indaver Waste | IW1 | 17 | Waste | Air | |||
| Moneypoint | MP1 | 285 | Coal | Heavy fuel oil | Condensing steam cycle | Drum | Water | 
| Moneypoint | MP2 | 285 | Coal | Heavy fuel oil | Condensing steam cycle | Drum | Water | 
| Moneypoint | MP3 | 285 | Coal | Heavy fuel oil | Condensing steam cycle | Drum | Water | 
| North Wall [c] | NW5 | 104 | Gas | Distillate oil | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Poolbeg | PBC | 463 | Gas | Distillate oil | Combined cycle | Waste heat recovery | Water | 
| Rhode | RP1 | 52 | Distillate oil | n/a | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Rhode | RP2 | 52 | Distillate oil | n/a | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Sealrock | SK3 | 81 | Gas | Distillate oil | Open cycle | Waste heat recovery | Water | 
| Sealrock | SK4 | 81 | Gas | Distillate oil | Open cycle | Waste heat recovery | Water | 
| Tarbert | TB1 | 54 | Heavy fuel oil | n/a | Condensing steam cycle | Drum | Water | 
| Tarbert | TB2 | 54 | Heavy fuel oil | n/a | Condensing steam cycle | Drum | Water | 
| Tarbert | TB3 | 241 | Heavy fuel oil | n/a | Condensing steam cycle | Once-through | Water | 
| Tarbert | TB4 | 243 | Heavy fuel oil | n/a | Condensing steam cycle | Once-through | Water | 
| Tawnaghmore | TP1 | 52 | Distillate oil | n/a | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Tawnaghmore | TP3 | 52 | Distillate oil | n/a | Open cycle | n/a | n/a | 
| Tynagh | TYC | 386 | Gas | Distillate oil | Combined cycle | n/a | Air | 
| West Offaly Power [d] | WO4 | 137 | Peat | n/a | Condensing steam turbine | Circulating fluidising bed | Water | 
| Whitegate power station[d] | WG1 | 444 | Gas | Distillate oil | Combined cycle | Waste heat recovery | Air | 
Renewable
Non-dispatchable plants
This table outlines the type and capacity of non-dispatchable renewable energy generation in Ireland, which was over 3 GW in 2015. In 2010 it was 1223 MW. The vast majority of it is generated by Irish wind farms.
| Type | Capacity (MW) | 
|---|---|
| Wind | 4,300 (2020)[3] | 
| Solar | 1,000[4] | 
| Biomass | 34 | 
| Hydro | 22 | 
 
Hydroelectric
| Station | River | Site | Coordinates | Capacity (MW) | Plant (h.p. horse power) | Electricity sent out 1958 (MWh) | Ref | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anarget | County Donegal | 0.804 | [5] | ||||
| Ashgrove | County Kerry | 0.6 | [5] | ||||
| Ardnacrusha | Shannon | County Clare | 85.5 | 2 × 30,000 h.p. Francis turbines 1 × 34,000 h.p. Francis turbine 1 × 30,000 h.p. Kaplan turbine | 306,821 | [6] | |
| Ballisodare | County Sligo | 1.82 | [5] | ||||
| Belmont | County Offaly | 0.43 | [5] | ||||
| Bennetsbridge | County Kilkenny | 0.07 | [5] | ||||
| Boyle | County Roscommon | 0.13 | [5] | ||||
| Carrigadrohid | Lee | County Cork | 8 | 1 × 11,600 h.p. Kaplan turbine | 14,922 | [7] | |
| Castlegrace | County Tipperary | 0.1 | [5] | ||||
| Cathaleen's Falls | Erne | County Donegal | 45 | 2 × 31,750 h.p. Kaplan turbines | 194,095 | [6] | |
| Celbridge | Liffey | County Kildare | 0.055 | [5] | |||
| Clady | Gweedore | County Donegal | 4 | 1 × 45,650 h.p. Francis turbine | commissioned 1959 | [6] | |
| Cliff | Erne | County Donegal | 10 | 2 × 14,250 h.p. Kaplan turbines | 78,438 | [6] | |
| Collooney | County Sligo | 0.510 | [5] | ||||
| Cottoners | Kilorgan | County Kerry | 1 | [5] | |||
| Edergole | Lough Belshade | County Donegal | 0.65 | Vertical Pelton (188 metres head) | [5] | ||
| Glenlough | County Cork | 0.36 | [5] | ||||
| Holy Cross | County Tipperary | 0.205 | [5] | ||||
| Inch Mills | County Kilkenny | 0.1 | [5] | ||||
| Inniscarra | Lee | County Cork | 19 | 1 × 21,000 h.p. Kaplan turbine 1 × 5,800 h.p. Kaplan turbine | 52,509 | [7] | |
| Milford | County Carlow | 0.29 | [5] | ||||
| Owenbeg | County Cork | 0.8 | [5] | ||||
| Poulaphuca | Liffey | County Wicklow | 30 | 2 × 21,000 h.p. Kaplan turbines | 23,508 | [5] | |
| Golden Falls | Liffey | County Wicklow | 4.0 | 1 × 5,230 h.p. propeller turbine | 9,089 | [5] | |
| Leixlip | Liffey | County Kildare | 4.0 | 1 × 5,800 h.p. Kaplan turbine | 14,611 | [5] | |
| Turlough Hill (pumped storage) | County Wicklow | 292 | [8] | 
Wind
Former power stations
New power stations were commissioned in the 1950s to meet the increasing demand for electricity. These included the following.[9]
| Station | County | Capacity (MW) | Type/fuel | Generating plant | Transformers | Electricity supplied in 1957–8 (MWh) | Commissioned | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allenwood | Kildare | 40 | Peat | 2 × 20 MW | 2 × 10/110kV, 40,000 kVA | 216,014 | 1952 | 
| Arigna | Roscommon | 15 | Coal | 1 × 15 MW | 1 × 10/110kV, 1,500 kVA | 1958 | |
| Bellacorick | Mayo | 40 | Peat | 2 × 20 MW | 1960 | ||
| Cahirciveen | Kerry | 5 | Peat | 1 × 5 MW | 1 × 10/110kV, 6,000 kVA | 3,056 | 1957 | 
| Clady | Donegal | 4 | Hydro-electric | 1 × 4 MW | 1 × 10/38kV, 5,000 kVA | 1959 | |
| Ferbane | Offaly | 60 | Peat | 3 × 20 MW | 3 × 10/110kV, 75,000 kVA | 123,043 | 1957 | 
| Gweedore | Donegal | 5 | Peat | 1 × 5 MW | 1 × 10/38kV, 5,000 kVA | 343 | 1957 | 
| Lanesborough | Longford | 20 | Peat | 1 × 20 MW | 1 × 10/110kV, 22,500 kVA | 1958 | |
| Marina CC[10] | Cork | 90-120 | Originally coal and oil, then gas | 1954 | |||
| Miltown-Malbay | Clare | 5 | Peat | 1 × 5 MW | 1 × 10/38kV, 5,000 kVA | 11,651 | 1957 | 
| Pigeon House | Dublin | 95 | Coal | 4 × 20 MW + 15 MW | 5 × 5/38kV, 110,000 kVA | 689 | Originally 1932–40, 1948 | 
| Portarlington | Laois | 25 | Peat | 2 ×  12.5 MW. Cooling tower | 1 × 10/110kV, 40,000 kVA | 129,952 | 1950 | 
| Ringsend | Dublin | 90 | Coal & oil | 3 × 30 MW | 2 × 10/38kV, 70,000 kVA; 1 × 10/110kV, 35,000 kVA; 3 × 38/110kV, 90,000 kVA | 273,707 | 1956 | 
| Screeb | Galway | 5 | Peat | 1 × 5 MW | 1 × 10/38kV, 5,000 kVA | 5,083 | 1957 | 
Other decommissioned power plants include:
| Station | ID | Capacity (MW) | Primary fuel | Commissioned | Decommissioned | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aghada | AD1 | 258 | Gas | 1980 | 2019[11] | 
See also
- East-West Interconnector
- List of power stations in Europe
- List of largest power stations in the world
- Pumped-storage hydroelectricity
- List of high-voltage transmission links in the Republic of Ireland
References
- ^ "All-Island Generation Capacity Statement: 2017-2026" (PDF). eirgridgroup.com. 2017. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 September 2023. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
- ^ "EirGrid and Soni Ten-Year Generation Capacity Statement 2023–2032, p112" (PDF).
- ^ "All-Island Generation Capacity Statement: 2021-2030" (PDF). eirgridgroup.com. p. 47.
- ^ Darmody, Jenny (26 February 2024). "Ireland's network now has 1GW of solar power connections". Silicon Republic. Retrieved 21 May 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "IHA: Existing Installations Page". Archived from the original on 2 September 2023. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
- ^ a b c d "Hydroelectric Power Plants in Ireland". Archived from the original on 26 January 2013. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
- ^ a b "introduction". www.foundmark.com. Archived from the original on 28 April 2001.
- ^ "Turlough Hill". Archived from the original on 2 September 2023. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
- ^ Garrett, Frederick C. (1959). Garcke's Manual of Electricity Supply Vol. 56. London: Electrical Press. pp. C-44 to C-49.
- ^ "Marina". ESB Archives. 1 March 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
- ^ "Facility information" (PDF).