183.8 MW Distillate Oil operating in Houston, GA — Southern Company Services, Inc. - Trans
183.8 MW
Nameplate Capacity
2
Generators
units
Petroleum Liquids
Technology
1995
Operating Since
Coordinates
32.5792, -83.5822
County
Houston, GA
Nearby Plants
| Field | EIA | GEM | Wikidata |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operator | Georgia Power Co | Georgia Power | — |
| Owner(s) | Georgia Power Co | Southern | — |
| Status | Operating | — | — |
The Robins plant is a 183.8 MW electricity generating facility located in Houston County, Georgia. The plant began operating in 1995 and is owned by Southern Company and operated by Georgia Power Co. It consists of two generators utilizing petroleum liquids as its primary fuel source. Robins operates within the balancing authority of Southern Company Services, Inc. - Trans, and is located within the SERC NERC region.
In the most recent year with available data, the plant generated 4,434 MWh of electricity, achieving a capacity factor of 0.3%. According to available rankings, the plant is the 3rd largest of 3 petroleum liquid plants in Georgia, and 41st of 60 nationally. Financial data indicates an installed cost of $238.64 per kW, based on FERC filings.
Generated from EIA, GEM, and public data sources
NERC Region
SERC
Balancing Authority
Southern Company Services, Inc. - Trans
Grid Voltage
115 kV
Regulatory Status
RE
Entity Type
Investor-Owned Utility
Sector
Electric Utility
658 MWh
Latest Month
4.4K MWh
Annual Generation
0.3%
Capacity Factor
$254/kW
Installed Cost
$730.0/MWh
Operating Cost
Georgia Power Company
Reporting Utility
Annual Capital & Operating Expenses
Cumulative Installed Cost
Per-Unit Cost Trends
This plant is outside organized wholesale electricity markets (ISOs/RTOs). Nodal pricing data is not available.
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
U.S.-Japan investment framework takes shape around massive natural gas power projects
A 9.2 GW project in southern Ohio and up to 10 GW of NextEra hubs in Texas and Pennsylvania mark the first concrete steps under Japan's $550 billion U.S. commitment
Last updated 2026-03-25
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