Trinidad and Tobago
power plants.
Trinidad and Tobago has 6 power plants in our public-data catalog, totalling 2.1 GW of tracked generating capacity. Its grid leans on natural gas — 87.4% of tracked capacity (1.9 GW), with oil a distant second at 12.6%. The largest single plant we track is Point Lisas (852 MW, online since 1999).
Trinidad and Tobago electricity mix
Tracked installed capacity by fuel, from our public-data catalog. Each fuel links to its global page.
Largest plants in Trinidad and Tobago
Frequently asked questions
Where does Trinidad and Tobago get its electricity?
Across the 6 plants in our catalog, Trinidad and Tobago's tracked capacity is led by natural gas at 87.4% (1.9 GW), then oil at 12.6%. These are tracked installed-capacity shares from public datasets, not live generation.
What is the largest power plant in Trinidad and Tobago?
The largest plant we track in Trinidad and Tobago is Point Lisas, a natural gas facility with 852 MW of capacity (commissioned 1999). Open nrgmap to see it on the map with 5 other Trinidad and Tobago plants.
How many power plants does Trinidad and Tobago have?
Our catalog tracks 6 power plants in Trinidad and Tobago, totalling 2.1 GW. This is a large, representative subset built from sources like WRI, EIA and OpenStreetMap — the true national total, including the smallest installations, is higher.
Can I see Trinidad and Tobago's power grid on a map?
Yes — open nrgmap at app.nrgmap.com and search Trinidad and Tobago to fly to it. Every tracked plant is a marker sized by capacity and coloured by fuel, with the national fuel mix in the side panel.