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Cooling water use patterns at US nonutility electric generating facilities
Authors:John A Veil  Markus G Puder  Debra J Littleton  David O Moses
Institution:a Argonne National Laboratory, 955 L’Enfant Plaza, SW, Suite 6000, Washington, DC 20024, USA;b US Department of Energy, FE-26, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20585, USA;c US Department of Energy, PO-60, 1000 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20585, USA
Abstract:Cooling water is used by many industrial facilities. The largest user of cooling water is the electric power industry, although other significant users include the pulp and paper, chemical, iron and steel, aluminum, and petroleum refining industries. The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is currently developing regulations to implement section 316(b) of the Clean Water Act, which deals with cooling water intake structures. The EPA will examine cooling water use patterns at various industries. Data pertaining to cooling water use patterns at utility plants are readily available; however, no information has been assembled for cooling water use at electric power generating facilities owned or operated by entities other than utilities (nonutilities). This paper presents data concerning cooling water use from two subsets of the nonutility sector and focuses on plants using once-through cooling systems. The first subset includes 123 nonutility plants that each generate at least 150 MW of power. Collectively, they represent 41,494 MW of generating capacity, or about 56% of the total nonutility generating capacity. Approximately 17% of the installations within that subset utilize once-through cooling water. The second subset includes 58 waste-to-energy facilities, which individually produce less than 80 MW but collectively generate about 2200 MW. Only 11% of this subset of plants uses once-through cooling water. The total 15,372 MW generated by once-through nonutilities is equivalent to only 6% of the 258,906 MW generated by utilities utilizing once-through cooling. From a national perspective this share may appear relatively insignificant. However, in some states, the nonutility once-through total is equivalent to a more significant percentage of the utility once-through total.
Keywords:Cooling water  Utility  Nonutility  Section 316(b)  Once-through cooling  Closed-cycle cooling
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