Biomass Magazine - September 2008

Page 19

industry

NEWS The Olympic Delivery Authority announced in July that Elyo Industrial Ltd., a subsidiary of Paris-based Suez Energy Services, has been awarded a $178 million contract to build, finance and operate the 2012 Olympic Park for the 2012 Olympics, which will be held in Stratford, England. The company will build two energy centers that will generate hot water, heating, electricity and cooling. They will each include a combined-heat-and-power plant for the heating, cooling and electricity. They will also be equipped with biomass boilers using sustainable biomass fuels and natural gas to generate heat. The technologies used will help the ODA reach its target of a 20 percent reduction in carbon dioxide emissions through the use of renewable energy. One center will be located in the western part of Olympic Park and the other within Stratford’s city limits. Both will be connected to nine miles of community energy networks. “The energy center will be at the heart of the new utilities networks in the Olympic Park, providing heating and cooling for the games and local communities in legacy,” said ODA Chief Executive David Higgins. The biomass source will mainly be wood chips originating from sustainable sources. “Sustainability runs right through this project, and our energy center plans will ensure the Games deliver the lasting

PHOTO: LONDON 2012

Biomass to power 2012 Olympics

A graphic artist’s rendition of Olympic Park in 2012

legacy of a sustainable energy supply for this part of East London,” Higgins said. -Timothy Charles Holmseth

NPower Cogen to build CHP plant in Scotland U.K.-based NPower Cogen has been awarded €8.1 million (US$16 million) as part of a Regional Selective Assistance grant from the Scottish government to build a 45-megawatt combined-heat-and-power (CHP) plant that would provide steam and electricity for Tullis Russell Papermakers Ltd., a paper mill in Markinch, Scotland. The CHP plant, which is owned by NPower Cogen’s parent company RWE NPower, would replace Tullis Russell Papermakers’ coal-fired power station. Working with RWE NPower, the new facility would enable the paper mill to dramatically reduce its annual carbon emissions by 70 percent, and it would produce 6 percent of Scotland’s renewable generation targets, according to RWE NPower spokeswoman Jennifer Crawford. “The reason this is such a big

deal is that if we didn’t replace the existing coal-fired power station at the [paper mill], it would have to close because, under European legislation, aging coal-fired power stations have to have the right cleanup equipment,” she said. “It wasn’t economical to fit just cleanup equipment to the [paper mill]. So, to replace it, we worked with Tullis Russell to find the most viable, energy-efficient option for them, and this was the best fit.” Crawford said NPower Cogen has all the appropriate planning commissions in place and that both parties hope to secure all necessary approvals by the end of 2008. To produce power, the plant will take in a variety of woody biomass that would otherwise be placed in landfills. The project’s contractor has yet to be named, but RWE NPower was taking bids at press time, Crawford said. The

plant is slated to be operational by 2011. Crawford said 17 megawatts of power generated by the CHP plant will be directly supplied to Tullis Russell Papermakers. The excess power will be sold to the U.K.’s national grid. “This (project) has been very well-received by Scotland and the Scottish government,” she said, noting that Alex Salmond, Scotland’s first minister, was on hand when RWE NPower announced plans for the CHP plant in early July. RWE NPower currently operates 11 CHP plants that supply a total of 2,000 megawatts of energy to the U.K. and the Republic of Ireland. The facilities supply power and heat to industrial customers in the oil, paper and chemical sectors. -Bryan Sims

9|2008 BIOMASS MAGAZINE 19


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.