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Projects: Projects for Investigator
Reference Number DTI/CC/141
Title Techno-Economic Evaluation of Cleaner Coal Fired Plant Operability
Status Completed
Energy Categories Other Power and Storage Technologies(Electric power conversion) 20%;
Fossil Fuels: Oil Gas and Coal(Coal, Coal combustion) 80%;
Research Types Applied Research and Development 100%
Science and Technology Fields SOCIAL SCIENCES (Economics and Econometrics) 20%;
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY 80%;
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation Not Cross-cutting 100%
Principal Investigator Mr S Simpson
No email address given
E.ON UK (formerly PowerGen)
Award Type 3
Funding Source DTI
Start Date 01 January 2000
End Date 01 March 2003
Duration 38 months
Total Grant Value £32,306
Industrial Sectors
Region East Midlands
Programme
 
Investigators Principal Investigator Mr S Simpson , E.ON UK (formerly PowerGen) (99.999%)
  Other Investigator Project Contact , University of Manchester (0.001%)
Web Site
Objectives

A three year research programme is being undertaken to develop ways of calculating the benefit of plant flexibility as a function of operating regime. This information will be used to evaluate methods for improving plant designs to ensure the optimum trade off between flexibility and other crucial plant parameters such as capital cost, efficiency and reliability. The main aims of the programme are:

  • to develop methods for assessing the costs associated with the operational inflexibility of cleaner coal power stations
  • to develop methods of determining the most costeffective trade-off between plant flexibility and other plant characteristics such as efficiency
  • to develop ways of improving the design of cleaner coal power stations
Abstract

A three year research programme is being undertaken to develop ways of calculating the benefit of plant flexibility as a function of operating regime. This information will be used to evaluate methods for improving plant designs to ensure the optimum trade off between flexibility and other crucial plant parameters such as capital cost, efficiency and reliability. The main aims of the programme are:

  • to develop methods for assessing the costs associated with the operational inflexibility of cleaner coal power stations
  • to develop methods of determining the most costeffective trade-off between plant flexibility and other plant characteristics such as efficiency
  • to develop ways of improving the design of cleaner coal power stations

Electricity markets throughout the world are being reformed and deregulated. One result of this is that power stations are required to operate more flexibly, with more starts and stops and morerapid variations in output. As a result there is considerable commercial pressure being put on manufacturers to provide plant that can be operated flexibly, and on generating companies to buy such plant. However, improving the operational flexibility of a plant almost invariably involves some additional expense, either in terms of increased capital costs or a reduction in efficiency or reliability.

This issue is particularly acute for the new generation of cleaner coal-fired power stations th at are now coming on to the market and, in particular, for integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) plants, which offer efficient generation of power from coal with excellent environmental performance. However, the operational flexibility of IGCC is believed to be poor and this is one factor inhibiting its uptake. There is thus the need to be able to quantify the costs/benefits associated with plant inflexibility/flexibility in order to design and build new, cleaner coal plants with opti mumlifetime economic performance.

Powergen UK plc and the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST) are working together to explore ways in which the costs of plant inflexibility can be quantified. Powergen is contributing its expertise and experience of operating in a variety of liberalised power markets world-wide, whilst UMIST is one of the world s leading centres for the economic optimisation of complex industrial processes.

Publications Related PublicationDTI (2001). Techno-Economic Evaluation Of Cleaner Coal Fired Plant Operability: Project Profile 284. DTI Cleaner Coal Technology Programme, URN 01/786, DTI, UK (PDF 45 KB)
Related PublicationDTI (2005). Evaluation Of Cleaner Coal Plant Operability - Analysis of the benefits of operational flexibility: Project Summary 284. DTI Cleaner Coal Technology Programme, URN 05/942, DTI, UK (PDF 166 KB)
Final Report Norris,D.P., Tabberer, R.J., Dimou, E. & Zhang, N. (2004). Techno-Economic Evaluation - Cleaner Coal Plant Operability. Report No. COAL R238 DTI/Pub URN 04/698, DTI, UK (PDF 513 KB)
Added to Database 01/01/07