September-October 2005

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Solar Heat, PV, and Grid-Connected Micro-CHP Plant

Newly arriving 2.5-kW Ecopower, and 4-kW to 15-kW Powerhouse, delivering on- or off-grid CHP

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By David Engle

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The Year of the Cogen Appliance? Well, maybe not, but it's interesting that three similarly conceived products for combined heating and power (CHP) are being introduced to the US at once, all of them aiming at slices of a potential market for home- and small-business energy.

One—the 5.7 kW Aisin 60 from Japan—is being fine-tuned by ECO Technology Solutions LLC, of Leesburg, VA, for domestic use (see profile Distributed Energy May/June 2005).

Now come two more options—similarly small in size but mighty in potential usability—from PowerPlus Technologies GmbH of Gera, Germany. The first measures just 54 inches long by 30 inches deep and 43 inches high, or about the same total volume as a clothes washer. Fueled by either natural gas or propane, the "ecopower" unit (note the lowercase e) can be variably controlled with a patented, automated modulator which allows precise load-following from 2 kW to 4.7 kW. It's designed for grid connection, so it could easily serve as a peak-shaver for many commercial applications. By capturing the engine's exhaust to make hot water (running through two independently regulated circuits), its rated fuel efficiency tops an unheard of 92%.

Single- and multi-family homes, schools, daycare centers, hotels, motels, agricultural processing stations, car washes, and health clubs are among the applications envisioned. All can rely on standard grid power as their primary electricity source; then, whenever they fire up the fuel for some hot water, the ecopower system would deliver plenty, while also outputting a couple of thousand watts of electricity an hour. The resulting power could either go into immediate use or be sold back to the grid (in states allowing net metering) or, if appropriate (and with some additional hardware), into battery storage.

Also arriving in the US from PowerPlus is the ecopower's slightly larger grid-independent version. It's designed primarily for commercial applications needing stand-alone standby power—e.g., telecom sites, remote facilities, and agricultural stations. Measuring 40 inches by 80 inches by 90 inches, and packed in a steel cabinet for outdoors, the Powerhouse generates 4.2 kW; a second engine can readily be added, doubling this to 8.4 kW. With this second engine, the system can also support a bundled 2.5-ton air conditioning system.

Successful Debut on the Continent
Ecopower units have been marketed in Europe (for which they were expressly designed) going on five years now, notes Mike Cocking, sales and marketing manager for Marathon Engine Systems of East Troy, WI. Over that time they've become something of a "hot item." As of last year, no fewer than 700 units had been sold cumulatively, and current sales are going at a clip of 50 to 80 ecopower units a month.

Cocking knows the ecopower sales numbers first-hand because Marathon makes the specially designed, extraordinarily durable single-cylinder engine that goes into it. The quiet, low-maintenance Marathon 5K is thus exported to PowerPlus for packaging with Europeanized electronics and cabinetry, then retailed. Marathon claims the engine has a 40,000-hour life—effectively, that's ten years of operation, assuming 4,000 normal-duty cycle hours out of the 8,760 hours in a year. "We've had engines going that long" without breakdown or overhaul, he says, "and some, even longer."

Marathon obtained the patent and manufacturing rights from the Gas Research Institute, which spent more than $75 million in development costs, designing the engine for continuous-operation heat pumps running on natural gas or propane.

Its touted maintenance interval is 4,000 hours (i.e., only once a year) and consists of an oil change, spark plug, air filter, ignition cable, and emission adjustment costing "a total of about 150 bucks," says Cocking. After 10 years of service the engine can be replaced with a new one by contacting Marathon's dealership network (www.marathonengine.com).

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Design-wise—and perhaps surprisingly—the Euro-styled cogen model was built by PowerPlus GmbH essentially as "a glorified water-heater," i.e., not for electricity primarily. This is just the reverse of priorities here. Cocking explains that in Europe, building codes now mandate frequent boiler replacement; PowerPlus thus saw this as an opportunity to provide homeowners much greater value when they upgrade, by offering a heater that would give power as a sort of "bonus feature." Europeans enjoy a stable grid and don't routinely need backup power, but Euro laws and policies strongly encourage cogeneration. Europe has "true net metering," Cocking notes, meaning that an in-home DG resource may sell electricity back to the grid for the same rate as the purchase cost. Hence, whenever the "glorified water-heater" from ecopower switches on, the owner's electric meter might spin in reverse, and the savings can mount up to lots of euros. One owner in Remsheid, Germany, who favors lots of hot water, reportedly spends nothing for electricity, but gets a check from her local utility for the equivalent of $130 or so every month—all thanks to Germany's liberal net-metering. Euro governments also typically offer molto bello rebates to underwrite upfront cost-efficiency upgrades. All things considered, then, payback on an ecopower will arrive in just three or four years, after which the customer actually owns a little onsite generating asset.

Ecopower and Powerhouse for the US
Conditions certainly differ, though. For one thing, net metering typically pays back rather "grudgingly," according to Cocking. Even so, he anticipates strong market appeal for both the ecopower and Powerhouse. Marathon Engine is now importing and adapting them for domestic sale, and several pilot applications are underway. Full commercial availability is also phasing in.

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