Ivanpah is working just fine and should set records for power production this year.
  And NG consumption for morning startup continues to drop.
  Eric
  Newly Released Data Indicates Ivanpah Gas is Under 5%
  April 25th, 2016 by  Susan Kraemer 
    The use of gas for generation at the world’s largest direct  steam solar tower has never exceeded 5 percent, according to newly  released data from NRG and confirmed by EIA and the California Energy  Commission (CEC).
       Data Source: EIA, NRG
   At the 377 MW Ivanpah CSP project, the use of natural gas is  limited to 5 percent of generation, despite media reports that  imply otherwise.
   In one example, David Lamfrom, desert project manager of the National Parks Conservation Association,  is quoted by the Press Enterprise  as saying that he doubted that the project would have gone forward if  it had been billed a hybrid plant: that “if it had been billed as a 75  percent renewable energy project, the BLM might have said ‘no.’”
   This suggests to the reader that Ivanpah is only 75% renewable, and  gets a quarter of its generation from gas. That is factually incorrect.
   Adam Ward, spokesman for the CEC, confirmed that Ivanpah generates 5 percent or less of its megawatt hours from natural gas.
   (Ivanpah must remain at least 95 percent renewable because it must  meet the Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) guidelines under which it  was certified.)
   I asked NRG spokesman David Knox why the data on generation from  natural gas didn’t show up at EIA in 2014. He told me that the plant was  not able to report generation from natural gas until 2015, as the CEC  had not yet decided on the methodology for calculating it.
   Knox forwarded me NRG’s spreadsheet including newly released figures  for January to August 2015 (indicated in red) which are not yet included  on the EIA site, where you can check the monthly generation for Ivanpah  <a href="http://www.eia.gov/electricity/data/browser/#/plant/57074?freq=M&ctype=linechartUnit 1, <a href="http://www.eia.gov/electricity/data/browser/#/plant/57073?freq=M&ctype=linechartUnit 2 and <a href="http://www.eia.gov/electricity/data/browser/#/plant/57075?freq=M&ctype=linechartUnit 3.
   EIA spokesman Jonathan Cogan told me that EIA has had delays getting  the first months of data online, but expects to have it up later in the  year. “When we finalize the 2015 data files, that will be incorporated  into the browser,” he said.
   Documents provided to me by NRG reveal new details about how many megawatt hours of generation came from natural gas in 2015.
     
   Source: EIA and NRG
   How the CEC decided on a method for counting natural gas generation in 2015
   It turns out that it took quite a few meetings with the CEC to find a  methodology on how to accurately determine how much gas contributed to  power generated, after the project increased its use of natural gas in  September of 2014 to 5 percent. Some of that now went towards  generation, but how to know how much?
   Knox said it was not that straightforward to determine how many  megawatthours were generated by gas or by solar. Steam generated by the  natural gas boiler mixes with the steam from the solar boiler at an  intermediate stage in the steam turbine steam path – so it was hard to  separate electric generation from natural gas alone.
   Once the method of calculating how much gas was contributing to  generation was worked out with the CEC, Ivanpah was able to report the  generation from natural gas and from solar. When the generator breaker  is closed, any gas that is consumed on-site is deemed to contribute  towards electricity generation.
   “So we meter the amount of gas consumed while the generator breaker  is closed and use an agreed upon conversion factor to convert the energy  from gas combustion into net MWh of electrical output,” explained Knox.
     
   Background:
   The Ivanpah concentrated solar tower project is the first-of-its-kind  direct steam plant at utility-scale; 377 MW. Thousands of huge mirrors  reflect sunlight onto a receiver where water is turned to steam by the  heat of the focused sunlight.
   Ivanpah has a PPA (Power Purchase Agreement) with PG&E for two of the three tower units comprising the plant, units 1 and 3.
   In 2014, Ivanpah operators had asked the CEC to be permitted to  raise gas use from a low initially planned 2 percent for parasitic  overnight use to 5 percent.
   The additional use was approved, and some generation was permitted  from gas as a result of that, with the first morning steam created by  burning gas, and during cloudy periods.
   Ivanpah’s initial bad start caused the project to fall short of the  70% required output for the first two year look-back period, during a four year ramp-up to full generation.
   In the first two-year look-back period, Ivanpah units 1 and 3 were  generating on average 19% short of the contracted percentage. But by the  second year, generation was only 3% below target and still improving.
    PG&E asked the CPUC to  let Ivanpah keep its PPA, as poor initial performance is fairly routine  with new technology during a ramp-up period, and this 377 MW direct  steam solar tower technology was without precedent when it began, other  than small projects at 11 MW.
   Current generation in the first quarter of 2016 has actually been  above mature year requirements (the 100% level due in 2018) of 640,000  MWh for these two units.
   Gas for keeping warm overnight helped speed morning start-up
   A major cause of the very slow morning startups in early 2014 – just  how cold the turbine gets by morning –  had some very low tech  solutions.
   “The initial thinking of how warm the steam turbine would remain  overnight was off quite a bit,” said Mitchell Samulelian, NRG’s vice  president of operation for utility-scale renewable generation.
   “A typical power plant steam turbine takes anywhere from four to 24  hours of warming to get hot enough to start up. But obviously if you  take 24 hours to warm a solar plant, you are never going to make any  money!”
   The solution to that overnight cooling was to increase the ceiling  steam heat – using gas, as well as to insulate the turbine. That has  successfully kept the turbine at well above 750 Fahrenheit at night so  that it wouldn’t cool off.
   By keeping warm overnight, Ivanpah can now start up very quickly in the morning; going from 4 hours to under 25 minutes.
   In a gas or coal power plant, this use of gas overnight for what is  called “parasitic load” – providing energy needs onsite that is not for  sale to the grid – is fairly routine.
   “If a coal plant the size of Ivanpah at 400 MW is shut down  overnight, and needed to run in the morning, this would also consume  natural gas, because they would be using natural gas to make steam seals  for the turbine in order to draw a vacuum and start up,” said  Samuelian.
   “So a lot of our fossil fuel plants have an auxiliary boiler that is  for supplemental heating when the plant is off-line, no different than  Ivanpah.”
   The additional gas use (up to 5 percent of generated electricity) was  approved for parasitic overnight use, and to create that first morning  steam to speed morning start-up times, and during cloudy periods.
   To stay under 5 percent the gas is closed off if necessary 
   “We can regulate how much gas we use,” Samuelian pointed out. “We can  make a choice to actually not add any natural gas to stay online, if  it’s a very cloudy day – versus just coming offline – if we think we’re  getting close to our limit.”
   And in 2016, gas has not even been as high as 5 percent.
   “In these latest three to four months our gas use is in the 3 percent to 4 percent range,” said Samuelian.
  cleantechnica.com |