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Large Unit vs. Small Unit Retrofit Considerations for Multi-Pollutant Emission Control

Large Unit vs. Small Unit Retrofit Considerations for Multi-Pollutant Emission Control. William T. Stark. APPA Engineering & Operations Technical Conference March 8, 2004. Basis of Presentation. 1600 MW, PRB coal-fired, base load plant

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Large Unit vs. Small Unit Retrofit Considerations for Multi-Pollutant Emission Control

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  1. Large Unit vs. Small Unit RetrofitConsiderations for Multi-PollutantEmission Control William T. Stark APPA Engineering & Operations Technical Conference March 8, 2004

  2. Basis of Presentation • 1600 MW, PRB coal-fired, base load plant • 100 MW, Illinois Basin, bituminouscoal-fired, intermediate load plant • Individual units ranging in size from10 MW to 550 MW pulverized coal-fired

  3. Regulatory Considerations • 8-hr Ozone Standard • PM2.5 Standard • Regional Haze Rule • Utility Boiler MACT • Industrial Boiler MACT • Clear Skies Act of 2003 • Clean Power Act of 2003 • Clean Air Planning Act • Interstate Air Quality Rule

  4. Utility Boiler MACT Option 1 • Emission standards by coal rank • Averaging allowed for facility • Incorporates Ontario Hydro Method and continuous sampling (Method 324) Option 2 • Cap-and-Trade program

  5. Industrial Boiler MACT • Applies to coal-fired units < 25 MW • Large units (>10 MMBtu/hr) must meet PM or metals standard, as well as HCl and Hg limits • Proposal contains initial testing and compliance requirements

  6. Interstate Air Quality Rule General • Affects 29 eastern states and DC • Proposal requires upwind states to revise SIPs to include control measures to reduce emissions of NOx and SO2 • Options are to participate in cap-and-trade program or comply with state budget set by EPA

  7. Interstate Air Quality Rule Proposed Caps and Allocations • SO2 allocations made in proportion to Title IV allowances. Overall a 50% reduction for 2010 and a 65% reduction for 2015 • NOx allocations based on highest year of heat input for state during 1999-2002 • Compliance on an annual basis

  8. Wet Scrubber Capital Costs *Line Drawn to Show Trend

  9. Wet Scrubber O&M Costs (1% S Coal) *Line Drawn to Show Trend

  10. Spray Dryer Absorber Capital Costs *Line Drawn to Show Trend

  11. Spray Dryer Absorber O&M Costs *Line Drawn to Show Trend

  12. SCR Capital Costs *Line Drawn to Show Trend

  13. SCR O&M Costs *Line Drawn to Show Trend

  14. Mercury Control • Concurrent reductions resulting from control of SO2 and/or PM • Sorbent Injection • Sorbent injection systems cost in the vicinity of $1.5 – 3.0 million • Depending on removal requirements, a baghouse may be required in addition to the sorbent injection system

  15. Baghouse Capital Costs *Line Drawn to Show Trend

  16. Emission Control Scenarios for Consideration • Emission control for each individual unit • Emission controls for combined flue gas streams from units • Use of high efficiency controls on larger units with less control on smaller units • Use of multi-pollutant control technologies

  17. Summary Comments • Compliance could be costly • Items to consider: • Capacity factor • Load shifting • Fuel switching • Shutdown of units

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