March-April 2004

In Poplar Bluff, Two Fuels Are Better Than One

When the municipal electric utility in Popular Bluff, MO, decided to expand its peak-generating capacity, it installed dual-fuel engines.

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By George Leposky

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Poplar Bluff is the seat of Butler County, which has a total population of 40,867. According to the local chamber of commerce, Poplar Bluff's trade-area population is 175,000.

Poplar Bluff and Butler County have gone separate ways with respect to electric power, says Foster. The county's Ozark Border Electric Cooperative lacks generating capacity and buys all of its electricity elsewhere for resale to its retail customers outside the city limits, but Ozark does not buy from the city utility that its territory surrounds.

Instead Popular Bluff sells its surplus power to Sikeston; to Jonesboro, AR, 73 mi. distant; and to other small municipal systems elsewhere in southeastern Missouri and northeastern Arkansas.

This Balkanization of electric-power retailing in the region and of the modest scale of the individual public utilities there might seem quaint and arcane to readers accustomed to large investor-owned utilities with service areas that encompass thousands of square miles. "Our electric utility formed in 1918," Bagby explains. "St. Louis and Kansas City were getting lit up, but there wasn't a whole lot else here until the municipalities started forming their own utilities. Today they're still primarily distribution companies."

A Measured Pace

The process that led to Poplar Bluff's new plant began with the city's wholesaling success in 1999, which included supplying Jonesboro with 14 MWh of electricity for several days. Peak rates at that time were running as high as $1,250/MW. The potential for generating revenues and electricity impressed the seven-member Poplar Bluff City Council and the five-member Municipal Utilities Advisory Board, which is appointed by the city council. "The city council and the electric board said if we had more capacity available and this opportunity came up again, it would help pay for the plant," Foster recalls.

Another consideration was the age of the original 1973-vintage peaking units. Each consists of a 450-rpm Model RV Delaval Enterprise engine, rated at 9,704 bhp (brake horsepower, or actual horsepower at the flywheel), from Delaval Engine and Compressor Division of Oakland, CA, coupled with a 7.2-MW Westinghouse generator.

"We felt it was time we looked at that plant and our overall power supply," Bagby says. "You want some kind of mix that has peaking and capacity you're getting from other places. Unless you have your own baseload plant, it's not good to have all of your eggs in one basket."

The city council and advisory board commissioned a study by the St. Louis office of Burns & McDonnell, an engineering firm headquartered in Kansas City, MO. Burns & McDonnell determined that a new plant would be warranted, prepared the specifications for it, and remained with the project to perform inspections during construction.

The project attracted three bidders:

  • Caterpillar Inc. of Peoria, IL
  • The Annapolis, MD, office of Wärtsilä North America Inc., a subsidiary of Wärtsilä Corporation in Helsinki, Finland
  • Poplar Bluff's own Huffman Inc., a general contractor offering design-build services for the complete power plant and substation improvements, using Fairbanks Morse equipment

Caterpillar proposed the installation of small turbines, but the Poplar Bluff officials didn't want those. Wärtsilä and Huffman/Fairbanks Morse both offered dual-fuel technology.

"The Wärtsilä bid was slightly lower," Bagby says, "but the proposals were very similar. Huffman being local and Fairbanks Morse's reputation as the industry standard are why the city council made the decision. Also we asked for a range of 15 to 20 megawatts. Fairbanks Morse was at the top of that range, and Wärtsilä was around 16 megawatts. At the time, the city council felt that looking for the most plant we could get was the right approach."

Fairbanks Morse received the order in May 2001 and delivered the equipment in the first quarter of 2002. Construction took about six months. The new peaking plant was operational for the summer generating season of 2003—four years after it first was proposed.

Nuts and Bolts

The FM-MAN 32/40 engines installed at Poplar Bluff are 720-rpm, medium-speed engines with a 320-mm bore and a 400-mm cylinder stroke. The product of a joint venture between Fairbanks Morse and MAN B&W Diesel in Augsburg, Germany, they use Fairbanks Morse's Enviro-Design low-emission dual-fuel technology, originally developed for the US Navy in a larger marine diesel engine (the 48/60). "As a licensee of MAN, Fairbanks Morse has exclusive rights to sell the 32/40 engine in the US," explains Jon Frey, a Fairbanks Morse marketing specialist.

Rated at 9,290 bhp, each 32/40 engine is coupled with a two-bearing, three-phase, 60-cycle generator made in Germany by AVK using Fairbanks Morse technology.

Each of the three 13,800-V generators can produce up to 6.72 MW of electricity, for a theoretical total of 20.16 MW. Operating at a full load in the dual-fuel mode, their efficiency is rated at 96.5%, equivalent to 6.48 MW apiece or 19.45 MW for the entire plant. Assuming that a single residential customer consumes 2-3 kW, the plant with all three of the new engines at full load could generate enough electricity for 6,483-9,725 homes.

Fairbanks Morse sold the engines and generators to Huffman complete with auxiliaries and controls. "We build our equipment with the engine and generator on a common sub-base 4 feet deep, a steel framework with an integral oil pan. The engine and generator are resiliently mounted to the top of the sub-base by means of conical vibration isolation supports," Frey says.

"The lube-oil filtration, filters, strainers, heat exchangers, prelube pumps, cooling system, and cooling towers—all of the auxiliaries to make an operating plant—were shipped loose. Huffman did the building addition, foundations, mechanical piping, electrical wiring, and switchgear modifications and provided a gas compressor."

Huffman paid Fairbanks Morse $8.6 million for the three units, including delivery to Poplar Bluff and field service and customer support during the installation, says Kevin Lidbury, the commercial-engine sales manager in charge of the transaction.

Rails and Rollers

Lidbury describes the FM-MAN 32/40 engines as "like a car engine, only on a much bigger scale," with a cast-iron block and V configuration. Building one takes seven or eight months.

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The engines were built and tested in Augsburg, sent by ship to the Port of Houston, TX, and then placed on a special railcar for transport to Poplar Bluff. The closest rail siding was 2 mi. from the plant site. Heavy-haul riggers used cranes to mount the engines on special trucks with multiple wheels, which hauled them through town at a speed of about 20 mph. At the plant, big rollers were placed under the engines to transfer them from the trucks to the concrete foundation beneath their sub-bases.

The three engines sit parallel to each other in the plant. Each is 42.25 ft. long, 12.25 ft. wide, and 16.75 ft. tall. Each engine weighs 306,945 lb.—more than 153 tons.

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