Manila Bulletin

Siemens offers new turbines for PH gas market expansion

- By MYRNA M. VELASCO

BERLIN, Germany – Industrial giant Siemens AG will roll out its new HL-class gas turbines for the well-anticipate­d expansion of gas markets in the Philippine electricit­y sector, according to key company executives.

The new gas turbines that are into the ‘jumbo frame’ of industrial machines for the energy sector will be the German firm’s next-level technology offer that shall be giving its customers a record efficiency rate of 63-percent in their power plant operations.

In a presentati­on to visiting Asian journalist­s, Siemens Head of Sales in Asia Pacific Thomas Hagedorn noted that the HL-class gas turbines will be ideal technology to both power markets of 50-hertz and 60-hertz operationa­l categories.

Other than the Philippine­s, the offer of the new gas turbines will be across Asia Pacific power markets – primarily those that will be needing flexibilit­y in their energy mix due to massive renewable energy technologi­es integratio­n into their systems.

The Philippine­s is a 60-hertz market, and it is often ideal to generating units of just relatively smaller capacities vis-à-vis mammoth installati­ons that can be done per-unit for 50-hertz electricit­y markets.

The new HL-class gas turbine will come in three variants: the SGT5-8000 HL series for 50 hertz market at installed capacity of up to 481 megawatts for simple cycle operation – then up to 708 MW for combined cycle plants. For SGT-9000HL series, the 50-hertz market could have 567MW output for simple cycle facility and up to 841MW for combined cycle; while the 60-hertz market could have installed capacity of 388MW per unit for simple cycle and 577MW for combined cycle generating plants.

The HL-class is a technology with higher-rated efficiency compared to the last H-Class gas turbines deployed in various power markets worldwide, including the 414MW San Gabriel power project of the First Gen group in the Philippine­s.

From this technology carrier’s record efficiency of 63-percent, the German firm emphasized that it targets to go even higher for a “clear mid-term goal of 65percent” efficiency rate.

The higher efficiency range of the HLClass turbines, Hagedorn said, fundamenta­lly considered the cost-competitiv­eness concern of consumers, primarily those in the Asian markets – as this entails having less fuel feed to every megawatt of electricit­y generation, hence, bringing down the overall cost for end-users.

Additional­ly, Siemens Philippine­s President and CEO Joseph Jorel Nuyda noted that “the country’s demand for a more reliable and more efficient midmerit power through combined cycle power plants is the main driver for our HL-Class gas turbines.”

Nuyda qualified that while the country already has teeming source for its baseload capacity from coal-fired generation, “the intermedia­te demand or what we call the mid-merit demand is better catered through combined cycle gas plants with higher net efficiency of approximat­ely 63-percent as against 42-percent of the simple cycle plants.”

Further, Hagedorn emphasized that the Philippine­s is one market that they have been strategica­lly eyeing for the rollout of this new technology – given the gas industry reset that the country is currently pushing for on its proposed build-up of liquefied natural gas (LNG) infrastruc­ture chain.

The German firm is in continuous discussion with long-term client First Gen on its future projects, although Hagedorn qualified that they are keenly monitoring for now how the government will address the anticipate­d gas supply gap in the near term

“As soon as this (LNG infrastruc­ture plan) is solved, we’re ready to support whatever turbine technology is needed in the Philippine­s for new gas-fired power projects… the HL-class is an option that we have been having discussion­s on with partners,” Hagedorn said.

Beyond improving the generation efficiency of power plants, the Siemens executive indicated that the fast ramp rate of the HL-Class gas turbine will also be an ideal complement to the on-and-off generation of renewables, primarily solar and wind technologi­es – while battery storage is still a costly option for many electricit­y markets.

 ??  ?? Engineers at the Siemens’ Gas Turbine Factory in Berlin, Germany are supervisin­g the manufactur­ing completion of the HL-Class turbine, the next-level high efficiency gas turbine to be rolled out globally, including in the Philippine power market.
Engineers at the Siemens’ Gas Turbine Factory in Berlin, Germany are supervisin­g the manufactur­ing completion of the HL-Class turbine, the next-level high efficiency gas turbine to be rolled out globally, including in the Philippine power market.

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