A six-month-long project to demolish the last coal-fired unit at Lakeland Electric’s C.D. McIntosh Power Plant in Lakeland, Florida, reached a milestone on Jan. 14 with the implosion of the facility’s 260-foot stack and 90-foot selective catalytic reduction unit (video below).
Unit 3 at McIntosh, the plant’s last operating coal-fired unit, was closed in 2021, three years earlier than originally planned. Lakeland Electric owns the plant along with the Orlando Utilities Commission.
A Lakeland Electric executive in late 2020 said the decision to close the plant was driven by increasingly higher costs to make repairs at the site, along with the plant’s declining efficiency. The official also cited the cost of maintaining large stockpiles of coal at the facility in the event the plant was to fail.
Buffalo, New York-based Total Wrecking & Environmental has been in charge of the plant’s demolition and hosted community leaders, other officials, and media at Saturday morning’s implosion. The company in a news release said the demolition project “is unprecedented in both scope and complexity, requiring a tremendous amount of resources, specialized crew members, and surgical planning to ensure the demolition is performed safely and on time, as this project is being performed in an active working power facility.”