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This is what distributed energy is all about. If the recent
blackout stretching from Detroit to New York to Toronto taught
us anything, it was the importance of distributed energy power
systems and their proper integration into the general power
grid.
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Press Release
August 15, 2003
Caterpillar Provides Substantial Emergency Response
to Alleviate Power Shortfall in Canada and Northeastern
United States
In the past 12 hours, Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT)
and its independently owned dealers have already provided
more than 400 megawatts of backup and primary power
to businesses, residential areas and utility companies
impacted by the massive power outages in the northeastern
United States and Canada.
"These unexpected power shortages underscore how
completely our economy and personal lives depend on
the reliable transmission of electricity," said
James Parker, Caterpillar vice president with responsibility
for the company's power systems marketing division.
"Our dealers responded immediately with power modules
to support large utilities, businesses and residential
areas. We are experiencing very high demand for our
units and expect to provide additional power solutions
in the coming days."
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The role of distributed energy is to augment and complement
centralized power sources by providing auxiliary energy to
local users or by selling energy capacity back to the utility
grid. Flexibility is obtained by installing distributed energy
systems to individual users or locations. Collocating distributed
energy systems with their primary users reduces the cost of
transmission and often makes distribution system improvements
unnecessary.
The benefits for consumers are as extensive as those for
suppliers. These benefits include lower service costs, greater
ease of maintenance and repair (less potential downtime due
to interruptions in service), and increased overall system
efficiency. The efficiency derives mainly from "load
leveling," the ability of a distributed energy system
to ease the burden of the power grid during periods of peak
loads. Distributed energy systems based on renewable resources
(solar, wind, and biomass) offer the consumer the possibility
of complete independence from the grid while making nonfossil
fuel energy sources practical. Indeed, distributed energy
is the only practical means of integrating renewable energy
sources (solar, wind, geothermal, mini-hydroelectric, photovoltaic,
and so on) into our energy mix.
According to the US Distributed Energy Resources Office,
some of the primary applications for distributed energy include
the following:
- Premium power: reduced frequency variations, voltage
transients, surges, dips, or other disruptions
- Standby power: used in the event of an outage as a backup
to the electric grid
- Peak shaving: the use of distributed energy during times
when electric use and demand charges are high
- Low-cost energy: the use of distributed energy as base
load or primary power that is less expensive to produce
locally than it is to purchase from the electric utility
- Combined heat and power (CHP, also referred to as cogeneration):
increases the efficiency of onsite power generation by using
the waste heat for existing thermal process
Reciprocating
Engines
Caterpillar's Electric Power Group, with its line of reciprocating
engines and its wholly owned subsidiary, Solar Turbines Inc.
that provides gas turbine solutions, is a leader in the distributed
energy field.
The reciprocating (internal combustion) engine is an established
technology. Two basic types of fuels are used, depending on
how the engine ignition operates. Spark-ignited engines, typically
found in automobiles, utilize gasoline or natural gas (in
the case of engines used to generate power). Compression-ignited
engines (used in both trucks and power generators) use diesel
fuel. Commercial power-generation reciprocating engines can
provide from 0.5 kW to 14 MW of power. Their advantages include
small size, low unit costs, and excess thermal output. This
excess thermal output allows for potential cogeneration heat
recovery. Currently this accounts for 7% of the electricity
produced in the US.
The Caterpillar Electric Power Group has been in the business
of providing distributed energy since 1939. The Cat engines
used in their generator sets are designed for use in rugged
field environments, such as remote construction and logging
sites. Given the inherent difficulty in repairing generator
sets in remote locations, the sets are designed for long-term
reliability and simplicity of maintenance. As such, the strength
characteristics of the systems (high-strength blocks; large
bearing areas; steel-backed, copper-bonded, aluminum-alloy
bearings; and hardened crankshafts) are reinforced to ensure
long-term durability.
A Cat generator set is a turnkey package with switchgear
components from a single manufacturer to ensure compatibility
and ease of parts replacement. The units are modular and compact
in design, providing from 8 kW to 5.9 MW. Systems with multiple
units can serve a wide variety of load demands. Their generator
insulation exceeds Class F requirements and has solid-state
overload protection. The sets can be weatherized to operate
and survive in extreme tropical, arctic, moist, dirty, or
sandy environments.
Cat generator sets provide the following valuable services.
They prevent disruption of critical processes. This can be
very important for manufacturing operations that rely on continuous
feed, suffer damage from sudden shutdowns, or create dangerous
situations when interrupted. Avoiding downtime prevents costly
loss of production or valuable data. Critical communications
are preserved during blackouts.
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Compared to expanding service lines from the grid, Cat generator
sets provide new opportunities for cost savings, overall reliability,
greater energy efficiencies, flexibility in fuel needs, and
the potential for heat recovery. An investment in a Cat generator
set results in savings by avoiding the need for costly new
central power plants and transmission lines. Under a typical
peak-shaving arrangement with a local power utility, the operators
of Cat generator sets are effectively paid to operate them
during peak demand periods by means of monthly credits, grants,
or reduced pricing. Payback on investment in a Cat generator
set often is less than three years. In short, a Cat generator
set is to a central power plant what a personal computer is
to a mainframe computer. It is a means of distributing power
in a flexible, efficient manner.
Given their inherent flexibility, low startup costs, and
ease of maintenance, Cat generator sets can replace the power
grid entirely, serving as the prime power source for customers
located where utility service is unavailable or costly (isolated
locations), utility rates are very expensive (areas with high
energy demands), frequent power outages occur (or as relatively
cheap insurance against such an occurrence), or complete power
control is essential for the operation of a facility (complicated
manufacturing processes, managers of extensive communication
and data systems, hospitals, and so on).
Cat generator sets run on almost any standard fuel (natural
gas, propane, landfill gas, diesel, crude oil, or heavy fuel
oil). Besides the operational flexibility this entails, operators
also can take advantage of price fluctuations in the fossil
fuel market. They can purchase those fuels that are currently
the cheapest without being dedicated to a fuel source whose
price is increasing. The generators also, in effect, produce
their own "fuel" when integrated into a
CHP system. Heat that is normally wasted is utilized to provide
space heating, water heating, or heat for industrial processes.
A system of this type can achieve 90% total efficiency.
Solar Turbines
Solars generator sets are used for
industrial power generation applications, such as cogeneration,
base-load electricity or emergency power for a wide variety
of facilities including industrial/processing facilities,
buildings and institutions, and distributed power plants.
Solars generator packages are also used in a variety
of oil and gas applications such as providing power for offshore
production platforms.
Rated from 1185-14,540 kW (1590-19,500 hp), Solar's rugged,
reliable industrial gas turbines can operate on a wide variety
of fuels including natural gas, distillates, NGL, LNG, landfill
and sewage gases, coal-seam methane, hydrogen, and others.
In addition, these versatile gas turbines are available with
dual-fuel and triple-fuel systems allowing them to operate
interchangeably on multiple fuels for even greater operating
flexibility. Solar gas turbines for stationary applications
above 4000 hp (3000 kW) can be equipped with our advanced
technology, dry, lean-premixed SoLoNOx combustion systems
for pollution-prevention to meet stringent emissions standards.
A City's Needs
Caterpillar's recent delivery of five reciprocating engines
to the city of Geneva, IL, illustrates the potential for distributed
energy. In the spring of 2000, Geneva adopted a long-range
Electric Utility Business Plan. The plan examined the energy
future of the city and its relationship with its primary power
suppliers, Commonwealth Edison and Wisconsin Electric. The
four main points of the plan concerned the following:
- Use of a 2,000-kV generator that had been modified to
allow parallel operations
- Use of fiber-optics technology for telecommunications
- Obtaining 138-kV delivery voltage from Commonwealth Edison
in cooperation with nearby towns
- Utilizing self-generation to reduce expected major increase
in wholesale costs of electric power after its current contract
expires
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The desire to avoid forthcoming energy cost increases drove
the decision to utilize some form of distributed energy that
would be owned and operated by the city itself. Of the distributed
energy options studied, it was determined that natural-gasfired
reciprocating engines were more suitable for Geneva than microturbines
for several reasons. Natural-gasfired reciprocating
engines are a clean technology and environmentally friendly.
They were available in the right size and power output for
the city's projected needs. These units were scaled for the
most efficient management of projected wholesale energy costs.
The units could be sited next to an existing substation in
the city's business district, away from residential areas.
By January 2002, the city had issued a request for proposal
(RFP) for the construction and installation of the reciprocating-engine
generator facility. The RFPs were received by March 2002.
Of the 11 RFPs received, the two best "least cost"
proposals were given further consideration. This additional
analysis was completed in May 2002. Of the two finalists,
HWS Energy Partners LLC of Champaign, IL, was found to have
more efficient equipment than its competitor. In addition,
the Cat equipment proposed by HWS was found to perform better
in economic analyses of the project. Though its competitor
revised its cost figure several times over the next four months,
HWS and its Cat generator sets were found to be the most cost-effective
choice. To ensure an apples-to-apples comparison, the same
cost numbers were used for catalyst converter (environmental
control) and owner's risk insurance. Other costs included
a five-year warranty, utility interconnects, and permits.
An analysis of the annual operating costs (based on an assumed
operating time of 4,000 hours and an annual power output of
approximately 115,000 MWh per year) included estimates for
fuel costs, lube and oil, parts, labor, and other overhead.
The 4,000 annual operating hours represent a 45.7% load factor.
During the peak hours, the units were assumed to operate at
about a 70% annual load factor and at about 33% during the
off-peak hours.
The 20-year study (extending from 2002 to 2021) projects
that Geneva's energy needs will increase from approximately
357,000 MWh to almost 634,000 MWh (an increase of 77%). Without
the distributed energy system controlled and operated by the
city, Geneva's annual power costs are projected to increase
from the current (in 2002) cost of $12,316,000 (or $34.49/MWh)
to $42,454,000 (or $66.99/MWh). With a distributed power system
from Caterpillar, the projected annual costs are estimated
to be $38,474,000 in 2021 (or $60.71/MWh). The total cost
savings over the 20-year period comes to $44,368,000 ($477,108,000
versus $521,476,000 without the distributed energy system).
This is approximately an 8.5% reduction in total costs over
the next 20 years, a considerable savings.
Estimates were also made of Geneva's power costs and revenues
for the subsequent 20-year period (2022 through 2042). The
results of that analysis show that Geneva would save an additional
$136 million with the distributed energy system. The 40-year
time frame represents the projected operational lifetime of
the generator units. The total projected cost savings for
the operational lifetime of the distributed energy system
is about $180 million. Further cost efficiencies result from
avoiding power losses (voltage drops) over extended transmission
lines required by an expanding power grid. Total cost savings
to the City of Geneva over the next 40 years could be as high
as $200 million (all amounts are in nominal dollars).
In terms of net present value (NPV) 2002 dollars, the total
savings to the city for the first 20 years of generator operation
is approximately $24 million, representing a cost savings
of 8.1% compared with being without the distributed energy
system. The NPV analysis assumes the cost per megawatt-hour
of both options will decrease over time. There are several
reasons for this assumption. Savings projections from 2005
to 2015 are very conservatively based on the recent lowest
market prices for energy. This is conservative since this
assumption does not exaggerate any projected cost savings
from utilizing a distributed energy system. Projected costs
after 2015 are assumed to increase at a rate of 3% per year
until 2021, when costs are assumed to increase by no more
than 2% per year. A discount rate of about 5.5% annually was
used to deflate the costs.
A Company's
Response
An offer from Caterpillar Financial clinched the proposal.
Given the analyses performed by the electric utility, it was
recommended that the contract for installing the reciprocating-engine
generator sets be awarded to HWS for the bid amount of approximately
$15,600,000. The award was for a turnkey operation that included
all permits, environmental safeguards, interconnects to the
substation, owner's risk insurance, and utility interconnects.
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The city entered into a 20-year lease purchase agreement
to provide financing for the project from Caterpillar Financial.
The amount financed from Caterpillar came to approximately
$880,000, bringing the total project cost up to almost $16,480,000.
The additional $880,000 was necessary to finance upgrades
needed in the Geneva Business Park substation for operation
with the proposed distributed energy system and/or the 138-kV
delivery upgrade from the existing power grid (the third item
on the city's long-term energy plan). Caterpillar agreed to
include these unrelated monies in the project's financial
package. Maintenance agreements, operating contracts and project
revisions resulted in a project cost of approximately $18
million. Given an approximately $24 million NPV of the projected
cost savings to the city incurred for the first 20 years from
the use of the Cat generators, this agreement grants the city
a real net on investment of at least $6 million.
In accordance with the agreement, Caterpillar has sold five
of the company's largest gas-fired engines to Geneva to supply
energy for a new electrical power plant owned and operated
by the city. The five units will be capable of delivering
29 MW of critical peak power for up to 40,000 homes. The plant
is scheduled to begin operations in January 2004. With its
current contract with its primary electrical utilities expiring
at the end of 2005, Geneva is now in a position to mitigate
postcontract price increases.
A recent press release from Caterpillar makes clear the positive
benefits of this agreement: "'We are pleased to have
won this competitive contract, the first of its kind in a
growing market opportunity for Caterpillar,' said Glen Barton,
Caterpillar Chairman and CEO. 'As North America's energy needs
increase, many cities face critical power shortages and unpredictable
pricing during peak periods of electrical usage. Caterpillar
products offer better fuel efficiency, lower operating costs
and are backed by an unparalleled dealer network.' 'This new
power plant will offer residents and businesses of our city
a higher quality of life by providing reliable and more affordable
power during extreme weather conditions,' said Kevin Burns,
Mayor of Geneva, Illinois. 'We examined several suppliers
and were most impressed with the operating cost and reliability
of Caterpillar products as well as the support of the company's
dealer network.'"
Once operations begin in January 2004, the City of Geneva
will own and operate the turnkey natural-gaspowered
plant. As it augments the power received from the primary
power grid, the proposed facility will create minimal pollution
due to the clean-burning nature of natural gas. Power distribution
efficiencies will be increased since the power source is much
closer to potential customers and less prone to power losses
through extended transmission lines. Though its function is
to provide energy to a growing city, its real purpose is to
protect the city from volatile price fluctuations.
The recent press release provides the specifications for
the 29-MW facility: "The new plant will be powered by
five Caterpillar G16CM34 gas-fired reciprocating engines,
manufactured by Caterpillar Motoren in Kiel, Germany. Each
engine weighs more than 300,000 pounds, and measures 40 feet
long, 15 feet tall and 10 feet wide. Stacked together, the
five engines would stand nearly eight stories tall. The engines
have arrived in Geneva and will be installed as part of the
current construction phase."
This will be the first installation of the Cat G16CM34 engine
in the US, a unique opportunity both for Caterpillar and the
city of Geneva. Each G16CM34 engine provides 5.9 MW of electricity
at greater than 45% efficiency. As part of the overall turnkey
package, Caterpillar also will provide Cat generator set paralleling
switchgear, power distribution switchgear, and engine and
total power-plant control systems. An electrical generation
management system using Power-Lynx technology will allow the
city to monitor, control, and manage the plant on-site or
remotely from the offices of the Geneva Electric Utility.
The Cat G16CM34 is a V16, four-stroke-cycle gas engine that
operates at a long stroke up to 750 rpm. It delivers a brake
horsepower (depending on ambient air temperature and altitude)
up to 8,180 bhp. It typically uses natural gas, but the CM
family can burn a wide variety of fuels. With the same cylinder
block and running gear as the standard CM32 diesel engine,
it has an operating weight (with flywheel attached) of 179,080
lb. Its engine block is a one-piece, nodular cast-iron unit
with an underslung crankshaft designed for extended high-peak
pressures. Standard features include flywheel and ring gear,
high-efficiency turbochargers, turbocharger aftercooler, pneumatic
engine barring device, gear-driven lube oil pump, electric
motor-driven cooling pumps (off-engine-mounted), electric
motor-driven pre-/post-lube oil pump (off-engine-mounted),
oil-filled drive coupling with oil feed-through hole in crankshaft,
crankcase explosion doors, Cat ADEM III control system, and
dual air/gas turbine motor starters.
Where From
Here?
A lot can change over the next 40 years. It should never be
forgotten that cost projections are just that: projections.
The analysts, however, did all they could to make reasonably
conservative assumptions. If anything, actual cost savings
will probably exceed projections. The City of Geneva showed
superior foresight and planning ability in getting a new system
on-line a full two years prior to expiration of its current
contract. Caterpillar showed superior project management skills,
equipment design, and financial acumen in landing this project.
DANIEL P. DUFFY, P.E., is a professional environmental
engineer in Cincinnati, OH.
DE - Nov/Dec 2003
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