By Rick Stouffer
Rick_Stouffer@platts.com
Cogeneration, a decades-old
power-delivery system that has been embraced and shunned numerous times by
utilities and customers in the last century, is poised to enjoy its
greatest renaissance since central generation became the norm.
A number of circumstances, not the least
of which are the need for “six-nines” power reliability, energy
efficiency, environmental–even security concerns–are melding to make
combined heat and power (CHP) projects inviting.
Even some utilities, which in many cases
previously looked upon cogen as a plaque, have embraced the concept and
are actively promoting it as a way to stay “connected” with customers.
And, while the same ol’ deterrents to
making cogen more widespread remain firmly in place–grid interconnection
difficulties, archaic permitting regulations and an overall lack of tax
benefits–cogen proponents believe the stars are aligning.
Presidential push
President George W. Bush’s National
Energy Policy addressed CHP. It recommended that the president direct the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to shorten project depreciation
life or provide an investment tax credit, to work with state and local
officials to promote CHP at brownfields sites, and to be more flexible
with regards to environmental permitting.
“From a policy perspective, combined heat
and power is positioned about as well as it’s ever been,” said Mark Hall,
vice president of external affairs for Trigen Energy Corp. in White
Plains, N.Y.
At the very least, the president’s strong
pro-CHP stance has opened the eyes of the rank and file at the EPA, which
must take an active role in cogen for any movement to flourish, industry
watchers believe.
That’s not to say the federal government
was not involved with cogeneration prior to its mention in the recent
introduction of the president’s National Energy Policy.
“Doe (The U.S. Department of Energy) has
been pretty active with combined heat and power,” said David Van Holde,
director of distributive energy for Boulder, Colo.–based retail consulting
firm E Source.
Through its CHP Initiative, housed in the
Office of Power Technologies, DOE hopes to raise awareness of combined
heat and power’s benefits and to highlight the barriers that limit its
implementation.
Doubling capacity
Under former President Bill Clinton, EPA,
DOE and the combined heat and power industry agreed to double the amount
of CHP capacity to about 92 GW by 2010, said Joe Bryson, CHP Partnership
team leader at EPA.
The partnership was formed as a follow up
to National Energy Policy recommendations. It is comprised of 17 Fortune
500 companies, city and state governments and nonprofit organizations that
agreed to work with EPA to develop and promote the benefits of new CHP
projects.
EPA will promote the projects, and
support accelerated project development through education, streamlined
permitting and provision of technical tools and services.
NEW COGENERATION BY CAPACITY CHANGE
SPREADSHEET
“The demand is there (for cogen),” said
Suzanne Watson, senior policy analyst in Washington, D.C. with the
Northeast-Midwest Institute. “It’s a growing market by necessity.”
The need for more efficient use of energy
has always been there, but masked through a thick veil of economies of
scale utilities were able to deliver, along with low-price process heat
from cheap oil and natural gas.
Those industries with the twin needs of
power and a high, steady thermal load, including pulp and paper, chemical,
oil refining and plastics constantly were and are searching for ways to
lower energy costs while increasing energy efficiency.
The Public Utilities Regulatory Policies
Act (PURPA) of 1978 and the Energy Policy Act of 1992 each in its own way
encouraged cogeneration development in this country. PURPA allowed big oil
and chemical companies, for example, to actually sell power back to
utilities, said Doug Nordham, executive consultant at E Source.
Show me the money
But neither piece of legislation
attracted utilities to cogen. “From the utility perspective, you still
needed the same wires as before in place, but you’re not gaining
anything,” Van Holde said. “Utilities look at cogen like they are losing a
big load customer.”
While a number of cogeneration projects
have been constructed, and there is general agreement that the concept is
energy efficient and helps reduce pollution, a four-word phrase still
holds sway over many cogen plans: “Show me the money.”
“Cogen shows a lot of potential, but
who’s interested in it and what are the economics of a project?” Van Holde
asked.
Expanding the base
Proponents believe interest is expanding
from the traditional cogen industrial advocates (one estimate is that 90%
of all cogen systems are used by manufacturers) to include perhaps smaller
energy users, along with buildings and district energy systems serving
universities, government complexes and central business districts in
cities.
Trigen, for example, has installed a
26-MW cogen system at the University of Maryland that it says saves the
institution some $6 million per year in energy costs.
It took six years of fighting the
bureaucracy for Lawrence, Mass.-based textile manufacturer Malden Mills to
finally realize its dream of a CHP powered facility following a
devastating fire in 1995.
Perseverance has paid off–literally–for
Malden Mills, as the company is recording some $1 million annually in
energy savings using the CHP system.
While the savings are there for companies
taking the cogen plunge, so, too, are the roadblocks. Select your
favorite: Interconnection barriers, the high cost to exit the grid, lousy
depreciation schedule for cogen products and the list goes on.
Still, there is work ongoing on a number
of fronts, both federal and state, to smooth out the bumps in the cogen
road. And incentives are crucial to making cogen highly viable, said E
Source’s Nordham.
“Without some form of tax credits and
incentives, I don’t see new cogen technologies as major factors in
utilities operations,” he said.
Cinergy sees synergies
Some utilities are moving forward with
cogen involvement. Cincinnati, Ohio-based Cincergy Corp.’s Cinergy
Solutions Inc. unit was founded about five years ago to take advantage of
what was perceived as the rapidly changing power world due to
deregulation.
Cinergy Solutions looked at cogen
projects as a way to be a low-cost energy producer.
“We also were hearing from our multi-site
industrial customers telling us they needed more efficient operations,”
said Chip O’Donnell, vice president, business development for Cinergy
Solutions.
The company currently has 19 operating
projects totaling 1,075 MW of capacity, with several projects under
development, including a 700-MW project with BP in Texas City, Texas.
NEW COGENERATION BY REGION SPREADSHEET
Cinergy Solutions contributed three
cents, roughly $4.8 million, to parent company Cinergy Corp.’s $128.5
million third-quarter bottom line.
NiSource likewise likes the look of cogen,
forming Primary Energy Inc. more than five years ago to tap into the need
for “inside the fence” facilities.
“We’ve worked primarily with the steel
industry in northwest Indiana, (NiSource is based in Merrillville, Ind.),
and done seven or eight projects,” said Mark Wyckoff, Primary Energy’s
executive vice president and chief operating officer.
The company’s largest project to date, a
more than 5,000-MW facility at the British Petroleum refinery in Whiting,
Ind., is slated to go on-line within the next two months.
Primary Energy likes working with huge
partners, including Duke Energy Corp. and Fluor.
Duke, for example, brings expertise as a
very successful generating company, a player in global energy markets and
electric and natural gas marketing. Duke also has the ear of turbine
manufacturer General Electric Co. when a deal is struck.
Fluor, likewise, has expertise and
insider knowledge on the needs of industrial companies, the kinds of firms
Primary Energy targets.
Tremendous growth
Cinergy Solutions’ O’Donnell said his
company’s five-year plan calls for year-on-year growth in the 30% to 40%
range, as it actively solicits cogen interest.
Unlike some competitors, Cinergy
Solutions takes strong positions in its projects; it builds, owns and
operates facilites.
“We can’t afford a bad project; we want
to control risks,” O’Donnell said.
Risk is something a number of companies
associated with today’s grid–and could lead to a surge in cogen projects,
believers say. Blackouts, brownouts, real or threatened, can have a
chilling effect on production and commerce.
“Six-nines” reliability, having power
there when a company needs it 99.9999% of the time, only becomes more
common as firms rely more and more on computer-aided, computer-driven
technologies.
And even with the tremendous ramp-up in
new generation construction, many believe serious transmission constraint
problems could happen soon.
Out of transmission capacity
“The U.S. has run out of transmission
capacity, and little new transmission is planned,” said Thomas Casten,
chairman and CEO of Private Power in Oak Brook, Ill., and chairman of the
International Cogeneration Alliance.
“No one is sure who will get paid to
build new transmission, and now we’re seeing a variety of new central
plant projects not being built because utilities are telling the
developers they have to run new wires and that makes projects
uneconomical.”
Another potential plus for CHP comes as a
result of the terrible tragedies of Sept. 11. While the nation now
operates on a heightened sense of security, experts point to the nation’s
power system, plants and grid as prime targets for radicals looking to
disrupt the American way of life.
“There definitely are issues surrounding
the idea of energy security,” said Cinergy Solutions’ O’Donnell.
Cogen projects built closer to end-users
would help solve security concerns, advocates say.
|