INDIANTOWN, Fla. (AP) — Florida Power & Light imploded the towering chimney stack of its last coal-fired generating plant on Wednesday, a milestone in its transition to cleaner energy sources.
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Puffs of smoke came from the base of the 495-foot (150-meter) stack and then it fell to the side in one piece, kicking up a large cloud of dust as it smashed into the ground.
A demolition company used 171 pounds (78 kilograms) of explosives to implode the stack and an adjoining conveyor building in Indiantown, 30 miles (about 50 kilometers) north of West Palm Beach.
The plant was built in 1995 and FPL purchased it in in 2016. It shut the plant down more than two years ago.
FPL will tear down the rest of the plant later this year. The company hasn’t said what it will do with the site, but it has been investing heavily in natural gas and solar-powered plants.
FPL is the state’s largest electricity producer, serving most of the Atlantic Coast and the Gulf Coast south of Tampa Bay.
Caution- VERY loud boom. Florida’s largest utility provider- Florida Power & Light (@insideFPL) implodes its last remaining Coal-fired power plant, as the company announces plans to put a solar energy plant in its footprint. 30 million solar panels by 2030 @NBCNewsNow @NBCNews pic.twitter.com/2GKiAPyxwT
— Sam Brock (@SamBrockNBC) June 16, 2021