The U.S. electric-power
industry is stuck in the middle of a messy transition to a
competitive system and groping for clarity in business models
and generation technologies, John Rowe told the Electric Power
conference April 5 in Chicago.
"Were constantly experimenting in this country
with mixed models of competition
and regulation," he said. "The big question now
is, how will the next generation of powerplants be built?"
Coals
Cool But new technologies further improvements.
(Photo courtesy of Bechtel Power Corp.)
Chicago-based Exelon Corp.s
chairman, president and CEO sees "three different models
of how to do business, none of which seems to be working."
In the Southeast, vertically integrated utilities operate
with little retail competition and modest wholesale competition.
Statewide integrated-resource systems such as Californias
are another model, and systems elsewhere, with substantial
wholesale competition and largely unused rights to retail
competition, are a third. Questions remain about what kinds
of generation must be built, when, who will build it, how
it will be financed and under what kinds of regulation, he
said.
Because of high natural-gas prices,
the country needs "a large quantity of cleaner coal-fired
plants and new nuclear plants .In both nuclear and coal,
were experimenting with new technologies, but tentatively,"
Rowe said. Because of technological uncertainties, "We
will continue to rely on gas peaking plants with some additional
load management."
Advanced-coal technologies caught
the attention of many attendees, who were told the systems
need to be proven at large capacities. Malla Reddy, vice president
of operations for Fluor Corp., Greenville, S.C., said 90 new
coal-fired plants would be needed to replace aging ones if
owners were to close them. Producing some 50,000 MW, they
would cost $70 billion to $90 billion. Subcritical pulverized-coal
is proven technology and supercritical and integrated-gasification
combined-cycle may be options. But the last two are "basically
unproven at the large size now contemplated," he said.
Hitachi Canada Ltd., Calgary, has
just completed construction of Canadas first supercritical-pressure
coal-fired boiler, the 495-MW Genessee Phase 3 project, Genessee,
Alberta, for EPCOR Utilities Inc., Edmonton, and TransAlta
Utilities Corp., Calgary. Supercritical technology has been
employed in Japan since the 1960s, says Jody Acton, Hitachi
senior manager, special projects. North American generators
have been cautious about adopting it because of higher costs.
The 400-MW Springerville Unit 3
project, now under construction in Springerville, Ariz., is
more typical of new coal-fired capacity, observers say. Bechtel
Power Corp., Frederick, Md., is building the $939-million
project as engineering, procurement and construction contractor
for UniSource Energy Corp., Tucson, and Tri-State Generation
and Transmission Association Inc., Denver. Its a subcritical
PC plant that will use a full battery of best-available control
technology for air emissions, including dry scrubbers, selective
catalytic reduction, low-NOx burners and baghouses. Included
are upgrades for scrubber systems and improved low-NOx burners
at twin 380-MW Units 1 and 2.