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About CHP
Benefits & Barriers
About CHP
Combined Heat & Power
Waste Heat to Power
District Energy
Benefits & Barriers
Benefits of CHP
...for owners:
Improved fuel efficiency -
up to 2/3 savings in fuel costs
Improved power quality & reliability
Improved energy cost predictability
Business continuity
Energy security
...for society:
Reduced emissions per unit of useful output -
up to 33%-50% reduced emissions
No ratepayer investment required in generating, transmitting, or distributing power
Reduced land-use impacts and NIMBY objectives
Reduced fresh water use
Optimized natural gas use and reduced price volatility - up to 40% greater efficiency than conventional units
Creation of new high-tech manufacturing sector in domestic and export markets
Support of competitive electricity market structure
...for electric utilities:
Reduced energy losses in transmission lines -
current transmission losses are about 10%
. CHP requires no remote transmission and therefore sustains no transmission losses.
Reduced upstream congestion on transmission lines
Reduced or deferred infrastructure (line and substation) upgrades
Optimal use of existing grid assets, including the potential to free up transmission assets for increased wheeling capacity
Less capital tied up in unproductive asset
Improved grid reliability
Higher energy conversion efficiencies than central generation
Faster permitting than transmission line upgrades
Ancillary benefits including voltage support & stability, contingency reserves and black start capability
Barriers to CHP
Inconsistent interconnection requirements between states and even between utilities
Potential interconnection delays
Standby and back-up power charges from the utility that can adversely affect project economics
Air regulations that do not recognize the environmental benefits of CHP
Non-standardized, time-consuming environmental permitting process
Complex local ordinances regarding siting, zoning, fire code, etc...
Volatile natural gas prices and "spark spread"
Facility managers unaware of the benefits of on-site power generation
On-site generation systems' lack of a specific tax depreciation category -- CHP systems can qualify for one of several categories depending on configuration and ownership resulting in a depreciation period ranging from 5 to 39 years
Utilities' lack of standard data, models, or analysis tools for evaluating DG, or standard practices for incorporating DG into electric system planning and operation
Download
For an extensive discussion of the benefits of CHP to the U.S., and existing barriers, see:
Combined Heat and Power: Effective Energy Solutions for a Sustainable Future
Oak Ridge National Lab, 2008 (PDF 2.5 MB, 38 pgs)
The Potential Benefits of Distributed Generation and Rate-Related Issues that May Impede Their Expansion
U.S. DOE Report Pursuant to Energy Policy Act of 2005, published in 2007 (PDF 4.7 MB, 188 pgs)
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