Russell City Energy Center Explained

Russell City Energy Center
Name Official:Russell City Energy Center
Coordinates:37.6346°N -122.1337°W
Country:United States
Location:Hayward, Alameda County
Status:O
Owner:Calpine(75%)
GE Energy Financial Services(25%)
Operator:Calpine
Th Fuel Primary:Natural gas
Ps Combined Cycle:Yes
Ps Units Operational:2 ×
1 ×
Ps Electrical Capacity:635
Ps Annual Generation:787 GW·h (2016)
Website:www.calpine.com/russell-city-energy-center

The Russell City Energy Center (RCEC) is a 619-megawatt natural gas-fired power station, which began operating in August 2013. It is operated by Calpine, and is located in Hayward, California.[1] It is named for Russell City and is built on that community's former landfill site.

History

In 2001, the Calpine energy corporation developed plans to build a 619 megawatt power plant, the Russell City Energy Center, at the city's former location. The plant broke ground in late 2010. The plant borders the City of Hayward Waste Water Pollution Control Facility and property owned by East Bay Discharge Authority near the Don Edwards San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge and the Hayward Regional Shoreline.

The Russell City Energy Center is the nation’s first power plant to receive a federal air permit that includes a voluntary limit on greenhouse gas emissions.[2] A Federal Appeals Court, in May 2012, denied an environmental claim by nearby Chabot College.[3] [4] The plant went online in August 2013, and its full output of electricity is sold to Pacific Gas and Electric Company under a 10-year contract.[5] Calpine Corporation owns 75% of the plant's peak dispatchable capacity, or 464 megawatts, and GE Energy Financial Services owns the balance.

On May 27 2021 an explosion at the plant shut down energy production. The city of Hayward is opposing the reopening until more is known about the cause.[6]

Design and specifications

The power train consists of two Siemens Westinghouse 501 FD Phase 2 combustion turbine generators (CTG), each maximum and each followed by a heat recovery steam generator (HRSG). The two HRSGs are heated from the CTG exhaust gases to generate steam. The generated steam is let in a single steam turbine generator (STG) of maximum. Resulting peak output is gross.

Under baseload operation, the output is gross from each gas-turbine and gross for the steam-turbine, adding to gross of which consumed by the auxiliary equipment, yielding a net output.

The two CTGs output the power at, the STG at, output which is connected to individual oil-filled generator step-up transformers, increasing voltage to . The auxiliary equipment motors are operated at 4,160 volts and the balance power distribution is operated at 480 volts and 277 volts for the lighting loads.[7]

Production

Russell City Energy Center's production is as follows.[8]

YearGW·h
20131.522
20142,247
20152.899
2016787

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.energy.ca.gov/sitingcases/russellcity_amendment/index.html Russell City Energy Center Amendment Proceeding
  2. Web site: Russell City Energy Center. Russell City Energy Center. Calpine Corporation. https://web.archive.org/web/20160610175608/http://calpine.com/power/plant.asp?plant=261#261. June 10, 2016. dead. April 18, 2017.
  3. Web site: UPDATE 1-NRG, Calpine adding natgas-fired plants in California | Reuters. In.reuters.com. 2013-05-04.
  4. Web site: Eric KurhiHayward Daily Review . Federal appeals court denies Chabot challenge to power plant – San Jose Mercury News . Mercurynews.com . 2012-05-05 . 2013-05-04.
  5. Web site: Two New Calpine Power Plants Begin Commercial Operations in California.
  6. Web site: Turbine explosion sends heavy metal flying in Hayward, cause unknown. Brooks. Jarosz. June 28, 2021. KTVU FOX 2.
  7. Web site: RCEC 2.0 Project Description.
  8. Web site: Russell City Energy Center . Electricity Data Browser . . April 18, 2017.