| Oak Ridge Lab Converting to Biomass
Aug 06 - Commercial Appeal, The
The Oak Ridge National Laboratory is going green.
The Department of Energy research facility has long studied energy
conservation and alternative fuels. Now it will put that knowledge into
practice with an $89 million renovation of its 1950s- era steam plant.
The power plant will be converted from burning mostly natural gas and oil to
biomass, such as wood and wood products. With an annual savings of $8.7
million on water and energy costs, the project could pay for itself in 11
years.
The power plant conversion is one of four "energy savings performance
contracts" announced by DOE to fulfill an agencywide commitment to cut
energy and water use substantially by 2015, with a focus on renewable fuels.
Other projects will be at the Idaho National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory in California and the National Energy Technology
Laboratory in Pennsylvania.
Each will be privately financed under partnership arrangements. "Energy
service companies" and utilities will buy and install the equipment and be
paid from the resulting energy savings.
Johnson Controls Inc. of Milwaukee is the energy service company for both
Oak Ridge and Lawrence Livermore.
The "super boiler" planned for Oak Ridge's steam plant and other energy
conservation measures are expected to cut the lab's yearly energy
consumption by 850 billion BTUs and water use by 170 million gallons.
That represents a more than 80 percent reduction in the consumption of
natural gas and fuel oil, and a cut in carbon emissions by 730,000 tons.
Lab spokesman Bill Cabage tells the Knoxville News Sentinel the emission
reductions would comparable to removing 2.1 million cars from the road
annually or planting 32million trees.
Construction is expected to take 31 months, with completion in early fiscal
2011.
Originally published by Associated Press .
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