Skip to Content

Biomass Helps Power National Lab

January 8, 2009

Stephen J. Mraz

Printer-friendly version

The Savannah River National Lab, Aiken, S.C., recently replaced a 1950s era coal-burning steam generating plant with a state-of-the-art facility that will burn biomass, mostly wood from the local logging industry. The original plant was too large, so Savannah managers often had to vent much of the steam, which reduced its efficiency. The new plant has two 30,000 lb/ hr steam boilers, one burning biomass and the other fuel oil. The fuel-oil boiler is a standby for maintenance periods and peak demands. The plant cost $10 million to build, but should save $1.5 million annually in reduced operating and maintenance costs, as well as less energy consumption. It also meets new Clean Air and Water Act standards.

Comments

biomass helps power national lab

you made only hot water or eletricity too ?

your biomass boiler

how much wood do you burn in one hour? do you generate electricity? if you do how much electricity do you produce?

Leave a comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Acceptable Use Policy