Muskingum River Power Plant
Muskingum River Power Plant was a 1.5-gigawatt coal power plant, owned and operated by American Electric Power. It was located on the west bank of Muskingum River, about northwest of the town of Beverly, Ohio in Washington County, Ohio. At its peak, the plant powered three million households. The plant operated from 1953 until ceasing generation in 2015.
Units
Four out of five plant's units were among the oldest in the United States:Unit | Nameplate capacity | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Notes |
1 | 219.6 | 1953 | 2014 | |
2 | 219.6 | 1954 | 2014 | |
3 | 237.5 | 1957 | 2014 | |
4 | 237.5 | 1958 | 2014 | |
5 | 615.2 | 1968 | 2015 | Supercritical unit, used closed-loop water cooling via a cooling tower |
Units 1–4 discharged their waste heat into Muskingum River.
Closure and demolition
As a cost-cutting measure, AEP idled one of the units at Muskingum River in 2010.Originally slated to be converted to run on natural gas, Muskingum River closed entirely due to environmental regulations and market conditions at a cost of $150 million to $170 million. Ohio's power consumption was noted as being "flat." The original proposal called for Units 1–4 to be shuttered by December 31, 2014 and Unit 5 to be converted to natural gas. Unit 5 closed on May 31, 2015 with 150 workers laid off.
AEP sold the site to Commercial Liability Partners in September 2015 to repurpose the brownfields for future redevelopment. Adamo was contracted to demolish the Muskingum River. Demolition was completed in June 2018 following the implosion of the plant's remaining two smokestacks.
Accidents and Incidents
Hydrogen explosion
On January 8, 2007, a hydrogen supply truck was making its routine weekly delivery of dihydrogen gas to the station's hydrogen system, when an explosion occurred at 9:20 a.m. The truck driver was killed in the accident, and ten other people were injured. Premature failure of the pressure--relief device's rupture disc was blamed.Two civil trials in 2011, however, essentially rejected AEP's claims that rupture discs and a third party contractor were to blame. The juries determined that AEP had acted with "deliberate intent" toward its own employee, Drumand McLaughlin, and with "conscious disregard" for the rights of the truck driver, Lewis Timmons, who was killed. A total of almost $13 million was assessed in damages as of August 29, 2011, including punitive damages to punish AEP subsidiaries Ohio Power Company and American Electric Power Service Corporation for their misconduct in failing to maintain the hydrogen systems. The companies were also to be assessed attorney's fees.