No.
AnswerThe term, 'power plant', could really apply to any source of power: from a power station to a small portable generator. A 'power station', on the other hand, is always used to describe a power plant that supplies the electricity grid system.
A plant is a manufacturing establishment, factory, or mill which produces goods. A generating station specifically generates power.
The difference is in the name; nuclear power plants produce electricity via a nuclear reaction producing head to turn a turbine, whereas coal fired power plants burn coal to produce the same efffect.
A power station (also referred to as a generating station, power plant, powerhouse or generating plant) is an industrial facility for the generation of electric power.
the sun is powered by fusion, the power plant by fission
The difference is only the material that is being used to generate electricity.
A power plant generates power while a power distribution center directs the power from a source to a destination.
Nothing, except possibly size, but that would be because of different power rating of plant not different type of plant.
You have to go to the Power Plant and return power to the Radio Station.
the power plant
Depends on what kind of power station it is, can bea nuclear power plant, a coal-burning power plant, a wind turbine, or a hydroelectric power station.
A power station that produces electricity by wind power
Yes, it generally is but a nuclear plant could refer to nuclear reactors which are basically the things that produce the power. So in essence, yes, a nuclear plant is the same thing as a nuclear power station