Hal B. Wansley Power Plant

Hal B. Wansley Power Plant is a power station located in northeastern Heard County, between Franklin and Carrollton, in the state of Georgia, USA. Its various units, powered by coal, oil, and natural gas,[1] are operated by Southern Company, Georgia Power Company, Oglethorpe Power Corporation, Municipal Electric Authority and Dalton Utilities.[2] It has one of the tallest chimneys in the world (305 m), built in 1976.

Location

The plant is located at 33°24′48″N 85°01′57″W / 33.41333°N 85.03250°W / 33.41333; -85.03250Coordinates: 33°24′48″N 85°01′57″W / 33.41333°N 85.03250°W / 33.41333; -85.03250 in the north-east corner of Heard County, Georgia, about 20 kilometres (12 mi) south of Carrollton, and at about the same distance northeast of Franklin.

Yellow Dirt Church Cemetery controversy

Replacing Confederate flags illegally removed by Georgia Power
Yellow Dirt Church Cemetery and the graves seven Confederate veterans

Historic Yellow Dirt Church Cemetery is located on the grounds of the power plant. Visitors have to stop at the plant's gate and have a security guard escort them to the cemetery.[3]

The cemetery was part of a larger tract of land owned by the Yellow Dirt Baptist Church (founded 1872).[4] When the church building and land was sold to Georgia Power, in 1971, the church (now Lighthouse Baptist Church of Franklin, Georgia) and congregation retained ownership to a 2 acre parcel which including the cemetery.[4] Problems eventually arose, however, when Georgia Power employees attempted to assert control over the private 2 acre parcel.

In September 2011, a Georgia Power employee entered the cemetery and removed seven Confederate flags placed on the graves of Confederate veterans.[4] The flags were replaced in October 2011 by the local Sons of Confederate Veterans, but were subsequently removed again by employees of the utility based on a company policy prohibiting the display of offensive materials on company property.[5] Members of the church congregation, some of whom had Confederate ancestors buried in the cemetery, protested.[4] Congregation members asserting their property rights to the cemetery, stating that the flags were not placed on company property and that Georgia Power had no right to interfere with the practice. Georgia Power conceded the matter, after company attorneys completed a title search in November 2011.[4] Members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans and descendants of Confederate soldiers buried in the cemetery, who had earlier protested the utility's actions, returned to the cemetery to replace the confiscated flags[4]

Individual units

Georgia Power Company owned

Southern Power owned

Collectively, units ST6, CT6A, and CT6B are referred to as unit 6. Same is true about its twin unit 7.

Oglethorpe Power Corporation owned

Unit 8, also known as Chattahoochee Energy Facility, consists of three combined-cycle gas-powered generators: 1 and 2, rated at 176 MWe each, and 3, rated at 187.7 MWe. All of them were launched into service in 2003.[7][1]

Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia owned

Wansley Unit 9 consists of three combined-cycle gas-powered generators: CT1 and CT2, rated at 171 MWe each, and ST1, rated at 226 MWe. All of them were launched into service in 2004.[7]

Coal delivery

Coal is delivered via a railroad by 100-car trains, each carrying 10,000 tons of coal. At the plant, an automated unloading trestle empties the train in about 30 minutes and conveyor belts move the coal to the storage pile or the storage bunkers inside the plant. The bunkers hold a 14-hour reserve; the coal pile target inventory is a 32-day supply.[1]

Coal is coarsely crushed at the mine then crushed again at the plant as it travels to the storage bunkers inside the boiler house. A pulverizer below each bunker grinds the coal to a fine powder that is mixed with air and blown into the boiler through a network of pipes. With both units at full load, Plant Wansley burns about 14,000 tons of coal every 24 hours. Annual consumption averages four to five million tons.[1]

Cooling water

Cooling water is taken up from the "service water pond", created by damming a small creek flowing from the north-west into the Chattahoochee River immediately on the south-eastern side of the plant.

At coal-fired units 1 and 2, water is converted to steam at 1,000 °F (540 °C) temperature and 3,600 psi (25 MPa) pressure. At full 920 MWe load, each turbine processes 6,200,000 pounds (2,800 metric tons) of steam per hour. Low pressure steam exits the turbine into a condenser where it is cooled and converted back into water to repeat the cycle. During this cooling process required by the second law of thermodynamics, waste heat from the condensing steam is absorbed by the warm water that circulates through the cooling towers, where it cools by evaporation and forced convection of air.[1]

Environment

Electrostatic precipitators on units 1 and 2 remove more than 99% of the fly ash from the boiler exhaust stream. A digital boiler control system, low NOx burners and Selective Catalytic Reactors, installed since initial operation, have reduced nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions by almost 90%. The use of cooling towers and the closed-loop steam cycle prevent thermal pollution in the Chattahoochee River.

Wet scrubbers and hydrated lime injection systems remove almost all sulphur oxides from the flue gas as well.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Plant Wansley brochure" (PDF). Georgia Power Company. 2003. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  2. "Plant Wansley" (PDF) (Press release). Southern Company. 2005-07-31. Retrieved 2007-01-12.
  3. "Yellow Dirt Church Cemetery". RootsWeb. 2006. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Brothers win -- for now --fight over cemetery at Georgia Power's Plant Wansley
  5. Sons of Confederacy Replace Flags on Graves, Georgia Power Removed Them
  6. Sierra Club, Physicians For Social Responsibility, illinois Forestwatch, and Eileen Lange v. Georgia Power Company, 05-11314 U.S. (Eleventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals 2006-03-30).
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 "Existing Electric Generating Units in the United States, 2006" (Excel). Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy. 2006. Retrieved 2008-07-14.

External links

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