Peterhead Power Station

Peterhead Power Station

Peterhead power station as seen from Boddam.
Location of Peterhead Power Station in Scotland
Country Scotland
Location Aberdeenshire
Coordinates 57°28′38″N 1°47′20″W / 57.477213°N 1.788879°W / 57.477213; -1.788879Coordinates: 57°28′38″N 1°47′20″W / 57.477213°N 1.788879°W / 57.477213; -1.788879
Operator(s) SSE plc
Thermal power station
Primary fuel Natural gas-fired (originally Oil-fired)
Combined cycle? Yes
grid reference NK127430

Peterhead power station is a multi unit station owned and operated by SSE plc near Boddam and the A90, just south of Peterhead, in Aberdeenshire in the north east of Scotland.

History

Oil-fired power station

The station was originally planned as a 1320 MWe oil-fired power station consisting of two 676 MWe generating units. Construction began in May 1973, with one unit opening in 1980, and the other in 1982. The original owner was the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board. The proximity of the station to St Fergus gas terminal meant, however, that the boilers were converted to burn gas as well as oil. When it opened, it burnt waste gas from the Brent oilfield, prior to this gas being refined at the Mossmorran refinery near Cowdenbeath, and the price of oil was uneconomic to use. By 1984, the price of oil made it economic to burn.

Gas turbines

In the early 1990s the owners (Scottish Hydro Electric) entered into a contract with BP to burn sour gas from the Miller Field. In order to satisfy the terms of this contract two further units were built (two 120 MW Open Cycle gas turbine) with a primary function to burn Miller gas when the two main units were unavailable.

These Gas Turbine have now been decommissioned and the plant sold to a firm in Africa where they will be used in a de-salination plant.

Combined cycle gas turbines

In 2000 the station completed a major repowering project to increase the efficiency and capacity of the station. Three gas turbines were utilised in an innovative manner to provide steam to one of the original steam turbines.[1] These changes allowed for 1150 MWe of output to be delivered at 57% thermal efficiency compared with the plant's original 37%.

The installed capacity of Peterhead increased to 2407 MWe in November 2007 following a compressor and combustion control upgrade on GT11, 12 and 13 making it the largest power station in Scotland ahead of Longannet. The transmission system at Peterhead however, limits production to 1550 MWe.

In May 2009 GT3 and GT4 were decommissioned. The installed capacity of Peterhead is now reduced to 2177 MW.

The power station was refurbished during 2015, and returned to service in November 2015. The station is now configured for flexibly and efficiently generating between 240 MWe and 400 MWe, with a Supplemental Balancing Reserve (SBR) contract for an additional 750 MWe to provide occasional back-up over the winter period.[2][3]

Hydrogen power plant

In 2006 there were plans to produce 350 MWe of power from hydrogen produced from methane, with the resulting carbon dioxide being pumped into the Miller Field by BP using carbon capture. It would have been the first large scale hydrogen power plant. On 23 May 2007, BP pulled the plug[4] on the carbon capture idea after losing patience waiting for government approval, with concern over the long term storage capacity of the Miller Field.[5]

Specification

The three 277 MWe V94.3A (now called SGT5-4000F) Siemens gas turbines provide a CCGT-type system of power generation, with three Doosan Babcock heat recovery steam generators providing steam to one (older) steam turbine.

References

  1. "Peterhead". SSE. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  2. "Peterhead power station returns to grid after major refurb". Scottish Energy News. 13 November 2015. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  3. "Peterhead power station welcomes £15m National Grid deal". BBC. 23 March 2015. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  4. "BP pulls out of green power plant". BBC Online. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  5. "Blame row erupts over power plant". BBC Online. Retrieved 15 March 2013.

External links

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