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GE’s Work at the Taiyanggong Thermal Power Station Could Become a
Model for Reducing Emissions at Power Plants Nationwide
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The Agreement Represents a First-of-Its-Kind Service Model for
Chinese Utilities Looking to Reduce the Operating Costs and
Environmental Impact of Existing Power Plants
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Technology Enhancements Will Boost China’s Fuel Flexibility
Soon after being chosen as the site for the 2008 Olympics™, China began
building the infrastructure to power the games. The cornerstone of the
$40 billion plan was the Taiyanggong Thermal Power Station, capable of
powering about 780,000 homes while having some of the lowest emissions
of any power plant in the country.
The 780-megawatt natural gas-fired plant in Beijing was the first step
in an effort to improve electricity generation facilities and reduce
greenhouse gas emissions across the country. In Beijing alone, the
government embarked on a $20 billion program to improve the city’s
environmental quality.
Less than a decade after Taiyanggong came online, China has taken the
first steps to reduce the operational costs and environmental impact of
existing plants. It selected GE (NYSE: GE) Power Generation Services to
upgrade and rebuild two gas turbines at the Taiyanggong plant. The
project will result in combustion systems that are simpler and more
flexible in terms of fuel used to generate electricity. In addition, the
agreement calls for GE to provide maintenance through 2025, a
first-of-its-kind service model that sets an example for Chinese
utilities looking to reduce their operational costs and environmental
impact of existing power plants.
Having electrified much of the country by the turn of the century, China
now is working to make its power infrastructure cleaner and more
efficient.
While it has worked to address air quality issues, a report
by the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate found that air
quality issues are impacting the Chinese economy. China is increasing
its use of natural gas units such as Taiyanggong as a means to help
reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Now, the improvements at the Beijing
plant, if replicated at other facilities around the country, could give
an additional boost to China’s efforts to improve air quality. At the
same time, it also could lower electricity costs for consumers and
businesses that, in turn, could provide a boost to the Chinese economy.
Signs of these improvements will be evident even to casual observers.
For example, once GE’s upgrades are complete, the Taiyanggong station
should have no visible emissions when it starts up.
“This is an important project for us because upgrading our plant’s
combustion system can help reduce the plant’s emissions, thus helping to
protect the environment,” said Mr. Cao Mansheng, director, Taiyanggong
Thermal Power Station. “Signing this CSA with GE makes strategic sense
because it can help ensure the reliable, efficient operation of our
facility over a longer period of time, helping us to lower our operating
costs as well as overall emissions.”
The GE upgrades also can improve financial returns for operators while
increasing overall operating efficiency and lower fuel costs. GE’s
maintenance oversight may enable plants to extend maintenance intervals,
reducing downtime. As a result, plants should have increased operating
hours that will boost revenue.
“We see this as an innovative service model to deliver technology
enhancements in China as operators seek to overcome their
fuel-flexibility challenges and improve the environmental performance of
their fleets,” said Yang Dan, vice president for GE Power Generation
Products and Services—China.
Under the terms of the agreement signed in December, GE is to deliver
parts for the upgrades by the end of the year, with the work completed
on both turbines by early 2017.
About GE
GE (NYSE: GE) imagines things others don’t, builds things others can’t
and delivers outcomes that make the world work better. GE brings
together the physical and digital worlds in ways no other company can.
In its labs and factories and on the ground with customers, GE is
inventing the next industrial era to move, power, build and cure the
world. www.ge.com
About GE Power & Water
GE Power & Water provides customers with a broad array of power
generation, energy delivery and water process technologies to solve
their challenges locally. Power & Water works in all areas of the energy
industry including renewable resources such as wind and solar, biogas
and alternative fuels; and coal, oil, natural gas and nuclear energy.
The business also develops advanced technologies to help solve the
world’s most complex challenges related to water availability and
quality. Power & Water’s six business units include Distributed Power,
Nuclear Energy, Power Generation Products, Power Generation Services,
Renewable Energy and Water & Process Technologies. Headquartered in
Schenectady, N.Y., Power & Water is GE’s largest industrial business.
Follow GE Power & Water and GE Power Generation on Twitter @GE_PowerWater
and @ge_powergen,
and on LinkedIn.
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