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...of the energy division at Kansas
City-based Burns & McDonnell. Supercritical PC requires
"tighter control with operating temperature in the boiler,"
he says. "Were about the only place in the world
still using subcritical."
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| On
Deck. Typical B&W 750-MW spiral-wound universal
pressure boiler is similar in concept to the supercritical
addition at Weston.
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Today, two supercritical plants
are under construction and a third is expected to begin next
year (see
related story). CFB boilers have been increasingly specified
in recent years (ENR 12/2/02 p. 39). And three teams of engineer-constructors
and equipment makers are developing opportunities to construct
IGCC plants in the U.S. In September, the GE Energy and Bechtel
Power Corp. team began front-end engineering design for a
$1.2-billion, 629-MW IGCC project in Ohio for American Electric
Power Co., Columbus (ENR 10/17 p. 9).
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Wisconsin Public Service Corp.s Weston powerplant
unit 4, one of only two supercritical pulverized-coal
plants in construction in the U.S., is expected to be
followed by others soon. (Photo courtesy of Babcock &
Wilcox Co.) |
With an emission profile close
to a natural-gas combined-cycle plants, IGCC is the
apple of the clean-coal power markets eye. Its most
serious drawback is its cost. An analysis early this year
by the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), Palo Alto,
Calif., found that electricity from the next few IGCC plants
will cost about 15 to 20% more than electricity from conventional
pulverized coal plants. The high cost and relatively untested
technology were cited by the Public Service Commission of
Wisconsin in 2003 in rejecting Wisconsin Energy Corp.s
plan to construct a gasification plant.
Capital costs for gasification
plants run in the range of $1,400 to $1,600 per kW, says Scott
Klara, deputy director of the Office of Coal and Power Systems
at Pittsburgh-based National Energy Technology Laboratory
(NETL). That is higher than $1,200 to $1,400 for supercritical
technology and well above the $1,100 to $1,300 per kW for
subcritical.
High capital cost and technology
risk were confirmed as the largest perceived risks of IGCC
in a study of owners, regulators, financial institutions and
vendors by Deloitte Financial Advisory Services LLC this year
for DOEs Office of Fossil Energy. But the report also
noted that uncertainty about regulation of carbon makes owners
reluctant to commit to a technology for which carbon capture
is a major selling point.
Of the major clean coal technologies,
circulating fluidized-bed combustion is the most proven. But
"CFB will be a real niche market," with 3,000 to
3,500 MW installed in the next 10 years, says Kowalik. Its
niche is the industrial market, where it will displace gas
boilers, he says.
Support
Advanced coal plants now in the
pipeline owe a lot to government programs promoting research,
development and deployment. The Energy Policy Act of 2005,
signed in August, authorized DOE to spend $200 million per
year through 2014 to co-fund clean coal projects with industry.
At least 70% of the funds are earmarked for technologies related
to coal gasification. The act also authorized loans and loan
guarantees for Clean Power Projects, again mostly focused
on gasification technology.
This comes on top of longstanding
programs such as Vision 21, whose goal is to develop a fossil-fuel
plant that will co-produce multiple commercial products while
achieving the ultimate in fuel-to-power efficiency and environmental
cleanliness, say DOE officials.
In 2004, EPRI launched CoalFleet
for Tomorrow, a joint effort of 17 generation companies and
Fluor Corp., Aliso Viejo, Calif., to accelerate deployment
of advanced coal technology and develop options for managing
powerplant CO2 emissions. In its first year, at the request
of its members, CoalFleet has concentrated on IGCC technology,
"but it has always been our contention that more than
one option is needed for advanced coal, including options
for postcombustion CO2 capture and storage," says Stuart
Dalton, EPRI director of generation. CoalFleet now has 45
members from eight countries.
Click
here to view chart
CoalFleet has met its goals for
the first year, including beginning preparation of broad plant
design guidelines for IGCC. Now, while refining the guidelines,
"we will start a parallel effort in combustion to accelerate
deployment of more advanced combustion options, such as high-temperature,
high-efficiency ultrasupercritical coal plants and supercritical
fluidized-bed plants," says Dalton.
"The next wave of coal units
is going to be supercritical technology," says John R.
Black, Babcock & Wilcox manager of business development.
NETLs Klara agrees that supercritical is ready to take
off and foresees commercialization of ultrasupercritical technology
beyond 2010. The tipping point for commercialization of gasification
will come after 2015, he predicts. By then, "clean coal"
may become a term even the most adamant environmental activist
can embrace.
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