by Aaron Larson on (#4M7XQ)
On July 29, 1949, at 2:15 p.m., General Electric’s (GE’s) first gas turbine at the Belle Isle Station in Oklahoma City began delivering power to Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co.’s distribution system. The 3.5-MW GE Frame 3 machine reportedly had an efficiency of about 17%. Since the Belle Isle machine (Figure 1) started up seventy […]The post The POWER Interview: What Drove the Gas Turbine Technology Leap at GE Over the Past 70 Years appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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POWER Magazine
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Updated | 2024-11-23 17:30 |
by Aaron Larson on (#4M6GK)
NuScale Power, Rolls-Royce, and China National Nuclear Corp. (CNNC)—three companies working on different small modular reactor (SMR) technology—recently announced positive developments for their respective designs. NRC Makes Progress on NuScale Design Review Portland, Oregon-based NuScale said on July 22 that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) completed the second and third phases of its SMR […]The post Positive Developments for Small Modular Reactors appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4M616)
BHP and Mitsubishi Development Pty (MDP) in late June signed a memorandum of understanding for joint research, development, and deployment of greenhouse gas emissions reduction technologies in several countries, including projects with battery storage, solar, and carbon capture and storage (CCS). The agreement, signed in Tokyo, Japan, on June 20, also calls for research into […]The post BHP, Mitsubishi Partner on Emissions Reduction Technologies appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4M0JX)
Nuclear power advocates suggest there are many benefits associated with nuclear energy. They point to high-paying jobs; billions of dollars in economic activity for plant-hosting communities; and secure, reliable, baseload electricity. But the most-important benefit of nuclear power may be that it emits no greenhouse gases, and therefore does not contribute to climate change. According […]The post Worried About Climate Change? Save Nuclear Plants [PODCAST] appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4KW3N)
Tokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO) on July 24 said it will decommission its Fukushima Daini nuclear station. The plant is located just south of the larger Fukushima Daiichi plant, site of a meltdown in March 2011 after an earthquake and tsunami heavily damaged the Daiichi facility. The four reactors at Daini automatically shut down after […]The post TEPCO Says It Will Decommission Second Fukushima Nuclear Plant appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4KVSR)
Venture capital investments in battery storage companies and projects rose significantly year-over-year through the first six months of 2019, according to a report from Mercom Capital Group. That level of activity is consistent with the growth in energy storage noted by speakers on July 24 at the Storage Week Plus conference in San Francisco, California. […]The post Investments in Storage Grow as Project Costs Come Down appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4KRZC)
Ohio’s Gov. Mike DeWine (R) on July 23 quickly signed a controversial nuclear subsidy bill that narrowly passed the state’s House of Representatives on Tuesday, making Ohio the fifth state in the nation to prop up nuclear power. Lawmakers passed H.B. 6 with a 51–38 vote Tuesday. The bill passed the state Senate on July […]The post Ohio Enacts Controversial Bill to Subsidize Nuclear, Coal, and Slash Renewable Standard appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4KR73)
GE Renewable Energy’s mammoth offshore wind 12-MW Haliade-X turbine is on track for an accelerated commercial launch in 2021, the company said as it unveiled the turbine’s first manufactured components on July 22. Haliade-X features a 220-meter (m) rotor and a 107-m blade designed by GE subsidiary LM Wind Power. The turbine design also includes […]The post GE Is Speeding Massive Offshore Wind Turbine to Market appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4KJGS)
JEA, the electric utility in Jacksonville, Florida, has been decommissioning the St. Johns River Power Park over the past year. A third implosion as part of the decommissioning occurred July 19, as a 640-foot-tall stack and two steam generating boilers were demolished. Friday’s work followed similar implosions in June 2018, when the plant’s two, 464-foot-tall […]The post Watch Stack Come Down at Florida Power Plant appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4KG3Q)
New York on July 18 enacted the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), law that requires the state to produce 100% of its power from renewables and nuclear by 2040. The legislation includes agreements to build two offshore wind projects worth a combined 1.7 GW by 2025, the single largest renewable energy procurement in […]The post New York Enacts 100% Clean Energy Law, Secures 1.7 GW of Offshore Wind appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4KF11)
A federal judge in Ohio on July 18 approved American Electric Power’s (AEP’s) plan to close Unit 1 of its two-unit, 2,600-MW coal-fired Rockport Plant in Indiana. The modified consent decree approved by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio on Thursday is the latest chapter in a long-running dispute among AEP, […]The post AEP Will Close 1,300-MW Indiana Coal Unit appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4KE1A)
In a bid to enhance the reactor oversight process (ROP), staff at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has recommended the commission change qualitative descriptions for some color labels that signify risk, scale back on the time and scope of some annual inspections at the nation’s nuclear power fleet, as well as increase intervals between inspections. […]The post NRC Staff Recommends Scaling Back Reactor Inspections appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4KDWR)
According to the Energy Impact Center, a Washington, D.C.-based research institute focused on deep decarbonization, CO2 emissions “must go net-negative by 2040, globally across all energy sectors†to begin countering climate change. The only way it sees to accomplish this is to “produce energy inexpensive enough to make carbon negative fuels that compete with fossil […]The post Reversing Climate Change with Nuclear Power [PODCAST] appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4KC6E)
The Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) on July 16 threw its support behind Georgia Power’s plan to add 2,260 MW of new renewable power generation to the utility’s portfolio, on the same day the PSC signed off on the company’s effort to decommission its long-running coal-fired Plant Hammond. Georgia Power earlier this year submitted a […]The post Regulators Back Georgia Power Plan to Close Coal Units, Add Renewables appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4KBJX)
Investments in clean energy projects have hummed along in the past few years, with the growth of renewables worldwide continuing to increase levels of solar, wind, and other resources in the global energy mix. Thomas Byrne has been in the middle of this energy transformation. Byrne, co-founder and CEO of CleanCapital and a graduate of […]The post The POWER Interview: CleanCapital Drives Investments in Clean Energy appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4K7RT)
New York City-based LS Power on July 15 said it would end a project to expand its natural gas-fired Troy power plant in Ohio if state lawmakers pass legislation to subsidize the state’s two nuclear power plants. LS Power in a news release Monday said, “Handouts to nuclear plants jeopardize the economics of the other […]The post POWER Notebook: Ohio Gas Plant Project in Jeopardy if Nuclear Bill Passes appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4JYSP)
A fully digital nuclear reactor instrumentation and control system (I&C)—the first of its kind in the U.S.—at a Purdue University research reactor in West Lafayette, Indiana, has been licensed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). Upgrades to digitalize Purdue University Reactor Number 1 (PUR 1)—a pool-type12-kWt reactor (that runs at 1 kW) originally built in […]The post Fully Digital Nuclear I&C Upgrade Gets ‘Unprecedented’ NRC License appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4JYD6)
In a recent interview, Raul Pereda, president and CEO of PW Power Systems (PWPS), talked to POWER about the company’s long legacy as a gas turbine manufacturer, advancements in technology it has achieved over the past 60 years, and new applications for its turbines within a transitioning energy system. No one can read a history […]The post The POWER Interview: New Directions for Aeroderivative Gas Turbines at PWPS appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4JX1T)
Investments in renewable energy projects slowed in the first half of 2019, primarily due to a 39% year-over-year drop in China, the world’s largest renewables market, according to data published July 10 by BloombergNEF (BNEF). BNEF said investments in China dropped to $28.8 billion, the lowest figure for any six-month period since 2013. China is […]The post POWER Notebook: Investment in Renewables Down in 1H2019 appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4JWR5)
The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and members of Congress are looking at legislation concerning research and regulation of energy storage. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who chairs the Energy and Natural Resources committee, on July 9 said there is bipartisan interest in combining a handful of bills on energy storage, dealing with research and development […]The post DOE, Lawmakers Looking at Energy Storage R&D, Funding appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4JV0S)
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is behind on its proposed revisions to the Obama administration’s effluent limitations guidelines (ELGs) for steam electric power plants. In an e-mail to POWER on July 9, the EPA confirmed that the agency was still “working expeditiously†to complete the proposed rule, and it has yet to submit it to […]The post EPA Delayed on Proposed ELG Revisions for Steam Power Plants appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4JTT3)
The Czech government on July 8 gave preliminary approval for Elektrárna Dukovany II, a subsidiary of utility ÄŒEZ, to build at least one new nuclear power unit in the country, along with as many as three more at existing nuclear power plants at Dukovany and TemelÃn. The country’s Ministry of Industry and Trade made the […]The post Czech Republic Plans to Expand Nuclear Power appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4JQ7F)
July marks two important milestones that set gas-fired generation on its course to becoming a dominant form of power generation: commercial operation of the world’s first industrial gas turbine in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, in 1939, and commercial operation of the first gas turbine in the U.S. used to generate electric power—a 3.5-MW General Electric (GE) unit […]The post A Brief History of GE Gas Turbines appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4JEGW)
Adding carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) to two Xcel coal units in Colorado that are slated to be retired by 2025 would push up the cost of power if compared with replacement with wind/storage hybrids. But CCUS, which generates revenues, would still work out to be cheaper than other alternatives mandated under the company’s […]The post Coal Unit CCUS Retrofits More Economic Than Many Alternatives, NETL Study Suggests appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4JE7S)
The price of lithium-ion batteries has plummeted over the past decade. Battery pack prices averaged $1,160 per kWh in 2010, according to BloombergNEF, but they dropped to $176 per kWh last year, and experts suggest they could be less than $100 by 2024. Tony Cooper, general manager of Green Cubes Technology’s Motive division, was a […]The post Lithium-Ion Batteries: Costs Down, Benefits Up [PODCAST] appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4J8QH)
Faced with the challenge of making the right moves to accommodate a swiftly changing energy ecosystem, one question draws into sharp focus for generators and the entire power and utilities industry: What will their role become in the years ahead, considering evolving portfolio mixes and changing industry dynamics? Leaders know there’s a very real possibility […]The post How to Position Your Power Company for the Future appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4J8QK)
The pairing of wind and solar is emerging as a smart strategy to implement renewable energy sources with better economic feasibility. The pairing of wind and solar power is an advantageous complement; the two benefit each other. The synergistic combination is an emerging trend in renewable energy and power generation as costs drop. The pairing […]The post A Fine Couple They Are (Wind and Solar Power) appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by POWER on (#4JE7T)
Argentina, the first Latin American country to adopt nuclear power when the Atucha I plant began operation in 1974, has plans to expand its nuclear generation, with Russia and China vying to implement theirThe post China, Russia Looking to Build Nuclear Plants in Argentina appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by POWER on (#4J8QX)
Japan’s government this June adopted a new energy white paper that suggests the country must rely on a larger share of nuclear and renewables to slash its carbon emissions and meet its target of a 26%The post Japan Will Explore New Avenues for Energy Self-Sufficiency appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by POWER on (#4J8QV)
Iraq’s $14 billion deal with Siemens to develop power generation projects in the country has grabbed most of the headlines this year, but the country continues to develop power projects with GE, and also inThe post Iraq Developing Solar to Complement GE, Siemens Projects appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by POWER on (#4J8QT)
Taishan-2 EPR Achieves Criticality. A second EPR unit in China’s Guangdong province attained a sustained chain reaction on May 28, marking another major milestone for Framatome, EDF, and China GeneralThe post POWER Digest [July 2019] appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by POWER on (#4J8QS)
The worldwide movement toward a clean energy future is barreling ahead. Most clean energy advocates seem to focus on wind and solar power as their resources of choice, and it shows, as the installed capacityThe post The Clean Energy Conundrum appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by POWER on (#4J8QQ)
Ultrasonic nondestructive testing, also known as ultrasonic NDT or simply UT, is a method of characterizing the thickness or internal structure of a test piece using high-frequency sound waves. TheThe post Ultrasonic Testing for the Power Generation Industry appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by POWER on (#4J8QN)
Chile, a country that relied on coal for about two-fifths of its power generation in 2016, in June announced it would mothball eight coal plants, totaling 23 GW, of its existing 28-plant coal fleet over theThe post Chile Presents a Coal Exit Plan appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4J23Z)
Coal power, which has seen a marked decline in the U.S., is necessary for reliability and energy affordability, and sustaining it could boost pollution technology exports and “improve lives while driving down emissions worldwide,†said Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Andrew Wheeler in a speech last week. Wheeler made the remarks at a 90-minute event […]The post Wheeler: Keeping U.S. Coal Sector Alive Will Benefit ‘International Environmental Protection’ appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4J240)
Teollisuuden Voima Oyj (TVO), owner of the Olkiluoto 3 EPR (European Pressurized Water Reactor) nuclear unit that is under construction in Finland, has said fuel will not be loaded in the reactor before the end of August, while it awaits completion of a schedule review being conducted by the construction consortium. Meanwhile, EDF, which is […]The post Long-Delayed EPR Nuclear Plants Face Further Holdups appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4J1VS)
A bill introduced by Senate Democrats on June 26 establishes a national electricity standard that would require large retail suppliers to source at least 1.5% of their power from renewables by 2020 and gradually grow that share through 2035. The measure comes a day after the Energy Information Administration (EIA) revealed monthly generation from renewable […]The post As Renewables Surge Ahead of Coal, Lawmakers Introduce National Renewable Standard appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4J0RJ)
Power plants are capturing operational data in ever-increasing amounts. However, analyzing all the data can be challenging. A number of tools are available that can help. In this episode of The POWER Podcast, two experts from one technology provider explain how big data can be analyzed to identify trends and create actionable information to solve […]The post How to Monitor and Predict Operational Performance with Digital Analytics [PODCAST] appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4HZ9B)
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on June 24 proposed to partially approve Georgia’s permit program for the disposal of coal combustion residuals (CCR). As it did so, it gave other states some advice: Follow Georgia’s lead and assume oversight of coal ash that power plants dispose within your borders. The preliminary approval marks another important […]The post EPA Urges States to Submit CCR Programs Even as Coal Ash Regulatory Overhaul Continues appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4HQ9B)
Danish renewables firm Ørsted’s 1.1-GW Ocean Wind project is the winner of New Jersey’s first award for offshore wind, the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) said on June 21. Ørsted, with support from Public Service Enterprise Group’s (PSEG’s) non-utility affiliate, vied for the award with two other offshore wind developers that submitted bids […]The post New Jersey’s First Offshore Wind Farm Will Be a Mammoth 1.1-GW Ørsted Project appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4HP14)
A proposed 900-MW gas-fired power plant was rejected by Rhode Island regulators on June 20, leaving project developer Invenergy pondering its options for the planned facility in Burrillville. Rhode Island’s Energy Facility Siting Board, after a daylong hearing in Warwick, said the plant is not needed. Chicago, Illinois–based Invenergy can appeal the decision to the […]The post Rhode Island Rejects Burrillville Gas-Fired Plant appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4HKJK)
Federal courts have been pretty kind to energy infrastructure in recent weeks, particularly in cases involving the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). For starters, this month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit removed one of the hurdles to construction of the Keystone XL pipeline. The court decided that a new presidential permit—issued […]The post Energy Infrastructure on Tenuous Winning Streak in the Courts appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4HJVC)
More than 2 million new solar PV installations were installed in the U.S. in the first three months of 2019—a new record for the first quarter of the year—according to the Wood Mackenzie/Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) U.S. Solar Market Insight report, which was released this week. Utilities led the way, installing 1.6 GWdc of […]The post New Record for Solar PV Installations appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4HJVD)
Authorities have initiated a far-reaching investigation into an unprecedented blackout that on June 16 hit a wide swath of South America—most of Argentina and Uruguay, and parts of Paraguay—affecting tens of millions of people. The massive blackout—apagón—is thought to have originated in a disturbance that affected two high-voltage lines, Colonia Elia Y Mercedes and Colonia […]The post Apagón: A Blackout Sweeps South America appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Aaron Larson on (#4HHP7)
Power plant SO2 and NOx emissions have decreased 92% and 84%, respectively, since Congress passed major amendments to the Clean Air Act in 1990. Meanwhile, mercury air emissions from power plants have decreased 90% since 2000, as federal limits on mercury and other hazardous air pollutants from coal-fired power plants went into effect in 2015. […]The post Power Plant Emissions Down Substantially in U.S. Since 1990 appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4HH0Z)
A new report from BloombergNEF (BNEF) predicts about half of the world’s power will come from renewable resources, including solar and wind, by 2050. The group’s New Energy Outlook 2019, released June 18, noted the trend will be driven by falling prices for solar, wind, and battery storage, along with trillions of dollars of investments […]The post BNEF Report: As Prices Fall, Renewables Rise Worldwide appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Sonal Patel on (#4HGWD)
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has issued a final Affordable Clean Energy (ACE) rule to formally replace the Obama administration’s controversial Clean Power Plan (CPP). Like the CPP, the June 19–issued final ACE rule will regulate greenhouse gases (GHGs), and it will be founded firmly on the agency’s 2009 Endangerment Finding. However, the ACE rule focuses […]The post EPA Finalizes ACE Rule, Replaces Clean Power Plan appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4HF25)
Siemens on June 18 said it would cut 2,700 jobs from its Gas and Power division, on top of 10,400 positions the German engineering firm last month said it would jettison as part of cost-cutting measures. The Siemens’ announcement comes one day after U.S.-based rival GE said it would cut 450 jobs at two of […]The post Siemens Will Cut Another 2,700 Jobs; GE Announces Cuts in Switzerland appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4HCMJ)
The rapid evolution of the world’s power generation landscape is creating challenges for utilities and others in the energy space, as power plant owners and operators adapt to new technologies and changing business models. Jan Vrins, managing director and segment leader for Navigant’s global Energy practice, is immersed in this change. Vrins, who joined Navigant […]The post The POWER Interview: Navigant Navigates Changing Energy Landscape appeared first on POWER Magazine.
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by Darrell Proctor on (#4HBS4)
The iconic Cane Run coal-fired power plant closed in June 2015 after 61 years of operation. The plant, owned by Louisville Gas & Electric (LG&E), was imploded on June 8 after months of preparation for its demolition. “Our company and our employees, who expertly manned the plant during its lifespan, celebrated many accomplishments as a […]The post VIDEO: Watch Demolition of Iconic LG&E Cane Run Coal Plant in Kentucky appeared first on POWER Magazine.