Ohio Falls Station

Ohio Falls Station
Location of Ohio Falls Station
Country United States
Location Louisville, Kentucky
Coordinates 38°12′N 85°52′W / 38.20°N 85.87°W / 38.20; -85.87Coordinates: 38°12′N 85°52′W / 38.20°N 85.87°W / 38.20; -85.87
Commission date 1927[1]
Owner(s) Louisville Gas & Electric
Power generation
Units operational 8
Nameplate capacity 80 MW

Ohio Falls Station is a hydroelectric power station owned by Louisville Gas & Electric (LG&E) and Kentucky Utilities (KU) which is located three miles west of Downtown Louisville, Kentucky. The generating station is located on Shippingport Island at the site of the McAlpine Dam and locks along the Ohio River in Kentucky. The plant was built in 1923 by Byllesby Engineering and Management Corporation and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The plant featured eight 10.4 MW units operating at roughly 13,500 hp per unit. Each unit was composed of Allis Chamber turbines and General Electric generators.[2] The plant is located inside the Ohio Natural Wildlife Conservation Area and is considered a large impoundment hydro power plant.[3] The station was built after a canal and dam within the Ohio river in an attempt to allow boats to navigate the 8 ft vertical drop among the falls that spanned 2 miles wide. Production of the canal and dam began in 1825. It was not until a repair on the dam was needed that Louisville engineers had the idea of building a hydroelectric station to harvest the power of the falls.[4]

History

At first the U.S. Army Corps Engineers had deemed the falls an unsuitable site for a hydroelectric facility due to the inconsistent water levels of the river. The rivers highs kept the water falling from the rapids and the rivers lows did not provide flows strong enough to move a turbine. In 1912 a Major of the Army corps revisited the research done and determined a hydro power plant was possible due to new technological developments. At its inception the Ohio Falls Plant generated enough energy to power the city of Louisville, but as the city grew the source became insufficient.[1] The dam is ran by the U.S. Army Corps Engineers who operate the navigation of the flow of the dam into the river. The U.S. Army Corps Engineers place priority in environmental conservation and controlling the water levels within the river. This limits the ability for the plant to optimize electricity production

Generating electricity

The water flowing through the dam enters the facility through the trash bars, catching any large debris, and then spinning a shaft connected to the blades which then spin the turbine, rotating the generator and producing electricity. The eight generators produce roughly 80 MW of electricity.

Improvements

LG&E and KU are currently investing in the plant to increase its production without damaging the ecosystem. LG&E and KU have implemented a three phase reconstruction plan. Phase 1 Was completed in 2002 and involved updating equipment technology to have automated and remote operation capabilities. Phase 2 was completed in 2004-05 and focused on regulating waste that enters the dam and could damage the machines. This included adding "trash-rack cleaning machine, sluice gate and trash racks" to filter out trash that flows through the river into the dam. Phase 3 is scheduled to be finished in 2017 and includes a final restoration of the units including, "new runner, rewinding the generator, stator restack, converting rotating exciter to static excitation and refurbishment of wicket gates." [1] As part of the remodeling of the plant a computer model was created to determine the optimal size and shape of the turbines to ensure maximum productivity from the plant. This will allow the plant to operate at a wider distribution of water levels and increase the electric production to 101 MW.[1]

Electrical production

The overall production capacity of the Ohio Falls plant is 80 megawatts. The average electricity usage for an American is 3,000 kilowatts per year, meaning the plant is capable of providing power for 233,600 residents. (80,000,000/1,000=80,000 x 24 hours/ day x 365 days/year=700,800,000 kilowatt-hours/3,000=233,600 residents).[5]

Costs of production

The LCOE (levelized cost of energy) for hydropower is 83.5/MWh. If the Ohio Falls Plant was to be rebuilt again in 2020 it would cost $58,516,800 to build and operate over its lifetime.[6]

Comparing costs

All costs are $2,013/MWh for plants being generated in 2020.

Plant Type Levelized Capital Cost Total LCOE
Conventional Coal 60.4 95.1
Wind 57.7 73.6
Solar Thermal 191.6 239.7
Hydro power 70.7 83.5

[7]

See also

References

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