Tarong Power Station’s ongoing maintenance program has delivered another milestone with a year-and-a-half-long project to refurbish one of its cooling towers now complete.
The cooling towers at Tarong Power Station are some of the largest and most iconic structures onsite and are essential to condensing steam back into water to be re-used in the electricity generation process.
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Stanwell general manager southern generation Mick Joy said Tarong’s Assets and Engineering Team had successfully completed the refurbishment of the Unit 1 and 2 cooling tower.
“At 116m tall, completing a refurbishment of this scale is no small feat,” he said.
“The project started in June 2023, with 50 workers taking around 27,000 hours over the past year and half to complete it.
“The top panels of the cooling tower have now been replaced, 89m2 of concrete repair completed as well as other measures implemented to improve structural integrity and avoid future deterioration which will extend the cooling tower’s life.
“This has been a collective effort thanks to the ongoing dedication of many teams across the site with a special shout out to station engineering, site services execution, site services operations, procurement, and corporate engineering.”
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The refurbishment is an important investment in the long-term safety, operational efficiency, and reliability of the cooling towers and Tarong Power Station. The Unit 3 and 4 cooling tower will also undergo a refurbishment later this year.
Cooling towers cool water to condense steam back into water which is heated to power the turbines in the plant. These turbines spin at high rates and power generators which create electricity that goes to market. The water is then pumped back into the boiler to restart the process making the cooling towers an integral part of the electricity generation process.