In a deal highlighting
power developers' bullish outlook on the growth of the U.S.
market, Bethesda, Md.-based PG&E National Energy Group
has announced a plan to purchase 50 turbines at a cost of
nearly $7.8 billion from three different manufacturers. PG&E
National plans to use the turbines to help in the addition
of nearly 16,000 Mw of capacity nationwide.
As part of what PG&E
National calls an innovative approach to financing power projects,
French banking giant Société Générale
will back a complex transaction that will provide for the
turbine purchases and related project costs without any near-term
cash outlays from PG&E Corp., PG&E National's parent.
PG&E's purchase agreement,
announced last month, includes 21 turbines from Mitsubishi,
23 from GE Power Systems and six from Siemens Westinghouse,
all to be delivered by the end of 2004. Société
Générale will finance all but the six turbines
from Siemens Westinghouse.
Although the developer has not
disclosed where the turbines will be located, PG&E National
is expected to start construction on a flood of powerplants
over the next year, many of them in fast-growing western and
Pacific states. Most recently, the company Sept. 29 announced
plans to enter the Nevada market with its Meadow Valley plant,
a 1,000-Mw merchant plant on a 160-acre site near Moapa in
northeastern Clark County, near Las Vegas. The natural-gas-fired,
combined-cycle plant is scheduled for a late-2001 construction
start and completion in early 2004.
By the end of the year PG&E
National plans to start construction on the Harquahala Generating
Project, a 1,040-Mw gas-fired plant in Arizona's Maricopa
County, scheduled to come on line in 2003. And in early 2001,
construction begins on the Otay Mesa project near San Diego.
PG&E National last month broke new ground with a deal
to offset the nitrogen oxide emissions at the 500-Mw facility
by replacing a waste hauler's diesel trucks with a fleet fueled
by natural gas (ENR 9/25 p. 15).
PG&E National Energy Group
is ranked 14th on the list of the top private power companies
by net project ownership in a survey by McGraw-Hill's Global
Power Report. Its net equity as of July was 7,530 Mw of electric
generation capacity. The developer had seven plants and 2,329
Mw in construction and 10 plants and 8,332 Mw in development.