International Airport Pennsylvania (USA)
INTEGRATING A MICROGRID WITH SOLAR POWER FOR ENERGY SELF-SUFFICIENCY
A U.S. airport is making history as the 1st in the country to get 100% of its power from a microgrid
Background
As part of its ongoing sustainability efforts, an airport in Pennsylvania decided to create a power generation microgrid to make the facility more resilient to grid outages. Its new microgrid employs virtually net-metered solar panels supported by five Jenbacher gensets that run on pipeline gas, offering an economical power alternative to the public grid. With black start and island mode capability, the microgrid delivers on its promise of greater reliability and resiliency while also cutting emissions.
A greener solution
The airport's new power plant is owned by Peoples Natural Gas, the largest natural gas distribution company in Pennyslvania. The solar array at the plant is owned by IMG Energy Solutions - a Pennsylvania-headquartered company that addresses the evolving needs of its customers for reliable, innovative, and environmentally conscious energy solutions. Together, Peoples Natural Gas and IMG own the microgrid. Key to the project's success was a IMG's focus on offering a distributed portfolio of highly efficient, reliable, pipeline gas-fueled power generation assets along with a swifty growing portfolio of solar energy solutions.
Peoples Natural Gas and IMG turned to INNIO's authorized distributor Northeast Energy Systems (NES-WES) to provide and integrate the microgrid, centered on five Jenbacher J624 gensets. Selected for the project due to their high electrical efficiency, the Jenbacher units contribute approximately 4.4 MW of electrical output each to the new 21.8 MW plant.
NES-WES provided engineering, field project management, and commissioning support during the project design, installation, and start-up. The plant was commissioned in May 2021. NES-WES continues to provide planned and corrective maintenance activities for the plant.
Results
Delivering black start and island operation capability, the new microgrid provides all of the energy needed for the airport. In fact, because the microgrid generally generates more power than the airport needs, excess energy is fed back into the public grid. This energy self-sufficient solution is bringing added reliability and resiliency to the U.S. transportation sector while also reducing environmental emissions in the region.
The project has reduced CO2 emissions regionally by approximately 6,000,000 pounds in 2022.*
*according to the customer
Customer benefits
The new microgrid is delivering substantial benefits including:
- Significant energy cost savings of about $1 million annually. Plus, the ability to sell excess energy back to the public grid
- Excellent overall plant efficiency of nearly 45%
- Enhanced reliability, availability, and resiliency
- A greener solution that significantly reduces CO2 emission regionally
- Service team with fast response for spare parts and repairs as needed
Location
Pennsylvania, U.S
Installed engines
5 x J624
Electrical output
21.8 MW
Electrical efficiency
44.7%
Energy source
Pipeline gas
Commissioned
2021
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