five

Marginal costs of water savings from cooling system retrofits: a case study for Texas power plants Marginal costs of water savings from cooling system retrofits: a case study for Texas power plants Environmental Research Letters

收藏
NOAA Institutional Repository2022-12-22 更新2026-04-25 收录
下载链接:
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/11/10/104004
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
The water demands of power plant cooling systems may strain water supply and make power generation vulnerable to water scarcity. Cooling systems range in their rates of water use, capital investment, and annual costs. Using Texas as a case study, we examined the cost of retrofitting existing coal and natural gas combined-cycle (NGCC) power plants with alternative cooling systems, either wet recirculating towers or air-cooled condensers for dry cooling. Weapplied a power plant assessment tool to model existing power plants in terms of their key plant attributes and site-specific meteorological conditions and then estimated operation characteristics of retrofitted plants and retrofit costs. Wedetermined the anticipated annual reductions in water withdrawals and the costper- gallon of water saved by retrofits in both deterministic and probabilistic forms. The results demonstrate that replacing once-through cooling at coal-fired power plants with wet recirculating towers has the lowest cost per reduced water withdrawals, on average. The average marginal cost of water withdrawal savings for dry-cooling retrofits at coal-fired plants is approximately 0.68 cents per gallon, while the marginal recirculating retrofit cost is 0.008 cents per gallon. ForNGCCplants, the average marginal costs of water withdrawal savings for dry-cooling and recirculating towers are 1.78 and 0.037 cents per gallon, respectively. Grant no. NA14OAR4310249
提供机构:
NOAA
创建时间:
2022-12-22
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务