Space Travel News  
Tenaska Takes Next Step In Development Of First Clean Coal Plant

TEC will become one of the nation's first commercial-scale, coal gasification with carbon capture plants. Its technology converts coal into substitute natural gas which can be used for electricity generation or fed into the interstate natural gas pipeline.
by Staff Writers
Chicago IL (SPX) Mar 06, 2009
Just days after an appropriations bill needed to implement the Illinois Clean Coal Portfolio Standard was signed, Tenaska, managing partner of the Taylorville Energy Center (TEC) project, hired the Westchester, Illinois office of WorleyParsons to oversee the Front End Engineering and Design (FEED) and facility cost report.

The FEED and facility cost report must be submitted to the Illinois Commerce Commission and Illinois General Assembly before the project can be built, according to Tenaska, TEC managing partner.

The facility cost report is intended to protect consumers by ensuring the rate impact from construction of the plant is limited to the benchmark contained in the Clean Coal Portfolio Standard law.

Under the terms of the approximately $1.5 million contract, WorleyParsons will serve as the 'owner's engineer', coordinating preliminary project engineering and preparing reports over the approximately 12 month FEED process.

The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity will provide funding for a portion of this contract and other expenses for the facility cost report.

TEC will become one of the nation's first commercial-scale, coal gasification with carbon capture plants. Its technology converts coal into substitute natural gas which can be used for electricity generation or fed into the interstate natural gas pipeline.

By capturing and storing more than 50 percent of the carbon dioxide, TEC will have an emissions profile comparable to natural gas.

Tenaska estimates that the net effect of operating the plant will reduce CO2 emissions by at least one million tons per year, as higher emitting power facilities are displaced by the cleaner, more efficient, TEC.

With an estimated total cost of $3.5 billion, TEC will create 1,500 construction jobs and hundreds of permanent mining and operations jobs.

"Illinois is starting to benefit from clean coal and its rich potential for green collar jobs," said Bart Ford, Tenaska vice president.

"WorleyParsons is not only a company with a strong local presence in Illinois, but it is one of the most experienced companies for this job. We look forward to working together with them on bringing this project to fruition."

"WorleyParsons is honored to be selected as Tenaska's Owner's Engineer for the Taylorville Energy Center. It is an important assignment on a groundbreaking project that will use proven technology to produce clean energy from Illinois' most plentiful energy resource, coal. We look forward to a long and successful business relationship," said WorleyParsons' Scott Johnson, Vice President of Business Development.

TEC is being developed by Christian County Generation, LLC, a joint venture of Omaha-based independent power developer Tenaska and Louisville, Ky.-based MDL Holding Co., LLC.

Related Links
Tenaska
WorleyParsons
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Schwarzenegger tells techies to go 'green'
Hanover, Germany (AFP) March 3, 2009
California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger kicked off the world's biggest high-tech fair Tuesday, telling executives to seize the economic crisis as a moment to shape up and go "green".







  • NKorea under growing pressure to scrap rocket launch
  • Scientists develop new plasma thruster
  • MIT Rocket Aims For Cheaper Nudges In Space
  • India's Cryogenic Engine Set For Integration With Rocket

  • NASA Kepler Telescope To Launch Aboard Delta II Rocket
  • The Case Of The Fairing That Would Not
  • DPRK Shows Tough Stand On Satellite Launch
  • BrahMos To Sign MOU With ISRO

  • NASA moves up shuttle launch one day, to March 11
  • NASA Gives Green Light For Friday Flight Review
  • New Launch Date Set For Discovery
  • NASA Defers Setting Next Shuttle Launch Date

  • Japan astronaut to try flying carpet in space lab: official
  • New ISS Crew Announced At Russia's Star City
  • JAXA Selects Astronaut Candidates For Future ISS Crew
  • Second ATV Named After Johannes Kepler

  • US space tourist shrugs off 10 mln dollar price hike
  • U.S. might loose technological leadership
  • China Selects Taikonauts For First Space Station
  • Realizing Yesterday's Vision And Tomorrow's Reality

  • Long March 5 Will Have World's Second Largest Carrying Capacity
  • Shenzhen To Build 4 To 5 Satellites Every Year
  • China's New Geo-Stationary Weather Satellite Finishes Testing
  • New Space Launch Center To Be Built In China's Southernmost Hainan

  • Tokyo school to host first robot teacher
  • Aurora Wins Contract For Multi-Robot Planetary Exploration
  • U.S., Chinese scientists build nanorobot
  • NASA And Caltech Test Steep-Terrain Rover

  • Mars Rover Spirit Faces Circuitous Route
  • Mars500 Crew Locked For 105 Days In Simulator
  • Rice Study Hints At Water - And Life - Under Olympus Mons
  • Mars Odyssey Mission Status Report

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement