Interested in linking to "Turbine retrofit ups efficiency 13%"?
You may use the Headline, Deck, Byline and URL of this article on your Web site. To link to this article, select and copy the HTML code below and paste it on your own Web site.
By Paul Studebaker, CMRP, Editor in Chief
Plants are recognizing that typical on-site cogeneration of heat or steam and electric power can yield fuel efficiencies of about 70%, compared to about 30% for electricity generated at regional powerplants and transmitted many miles to a facility. We’re seeing an increasing number of applications where turbines are being retrofitted for higher efficiency, increased capacity and lower emissions. “Industrial and power-generation facilities are being squeezed for output, and it’s hard to get permits for additional facilities,” says Anne McEntee, general manager, Power Services, GE Energy (www.ge.com).
At Dubai Aluminum, a 30-year-old plant on the coast, electric power represents 30% to 40% of the cost of production. “The plant was seeing tremendous growth and needed to increase capacity by 100 MW without increasing the facility footprint,” McEntee says.
GE modified Dubai’s turbines with tighter seals, higher firing temperature and improved airflow. The changes increased power output by 13% using less total fuel and lowered NOx per unit output by 15%. The same technologies can be used to decrease energy consumption by increasing efficiency and running slower:
“The plant was seeing tremendous growth, and needed to increase capacity by 100 MW without increasing the facility footprint.”
- Anne McEntee
“The turbine upgrade saved half the cost versus new capacity,” McEntee says, “$50 million versus $100 million.”