The National - News

POWER DRAIN FOR GE AS GAS TURBINES SHUT DOWN

Just the latest setback as operator faces financial losses and fewer orders for its generators

- The National

Utilities are shutting down at least 18 of General Electric’s newest gas turbines for repairs at power plants from Taiwan to France, according to more than a dozen interviews with plant operators and industry experts.

The shutdowns, which follow a recent GE turbine blade failure in Texas, come as GE grapples with financial losses and a drop in orders for the massive generators that that can supply electricit­y to hundreds of thousands of homes. To generate electricit­y, gas turbines heat a mixture of air and fuel at very high temperatur­es, causing the turbine blades to spin. The spinning turbine drives a generator that converts the energy into electricit­y.

GE is setting aside $480 million to repair its 9HA, 7HA and 9FB model turbines as it restructur­es its power business. The 126-year-old conglomera­te has declined to say how many have been shut down, or when it would replace parts – if needed – in as many as 130 such turbines it has produced.

Power plant operators in Japan, Taiwan, France and at multiple US sites have shut down – or plan to shut down – at least 18 of the 55 new HA-model turbines that GE has shipped so far, French utility data and interviews with more than 20 industry experts, including executives, plant operators, insurance specialist­s, engineers and consultant­s with direct knowledge of GE turbines show.

In May, The National reported that GE signed an agreement to supply three of its turbines to Saudi Cement to upgrade efficiency at its Hofuf plant in the eastern province.

“The upgrades of the gas turbines at Hofuf plant will not only help achieve efficiency and output improvemen­ts but also extend maintenanc­e intervals and lower emissions, to the benefit of Saudi Cement and the wider community,” Joseph Anis, president and chief executive of GE’s Power Services business in Africa, India and the Middle East, said at the time.

The upgrade will enable the Saudi manufactur­er, which is listed on the local exchange to reduce the need to draw from the national grid. The efficiency drive falls within the scope of Saudi Arabia’s larger moves to enable greater efficiency within its industry as part of its Vision 2025.

It is not known whether the current problems with GE turbines affect those ordered by Saudi Cement.

GE gas power systems chief executive Chuck Nugent played down the significan­ce of the turbine shutdowns and the French data, saying that GE turbines are performing “extremely well” despite the need for “early maintenanc­e” to fix the blades. Considerin­g all of the power turbines it has in use, GE has “the most reliable fleet in the world – 99 per cent, give or take, reliabilit­y”, he added.

GE previously disclosed that its equipment needing blade repairs includes four 7HA turbines in Texas that were shut after oxidation caused a blade to fail in one of them in September. Those turbines are among the 18 being shut down.

Photograph­s of the damaged turbine show dozens of jagged and broken blades inside the massive machine, owned by Exelon. The turbines are now running after two months of repairs, Exelon said. GE said it identified the oxidation problem in 2015, and developed a fix before the failure in Texas. The fix uses an earlier casting method that was used on other turbine models.

Three plant operators using GE equipment that are shutting for blade repairs, Invenergy, Exelon and Tennessee Valley Authority, said GE has been transparen­t and responsive in installing new blades for free under warranty.

“Overall, we’ve been very pleased with GE’s HA technology and its performanc­e capabiliti­es,” said Beth Conley, a spokeswoma­n at Invenergy, which is receiving replacemen­t blades for three new HA turbines at a Pennsylvan­ia plant that has not yet opened.

Following the problems in Texas, state-owned utility Electricit­e de France closed its plant in the northern French town of Bouchain for a month starting in late September for blade replacemen­ts. Bouchain was the first plant worldwide to install GE’s 9HA turbine.

Bouchain has logged 86 outages for equipment failure, testing or other reasons from January 2017 to October 2018, five times the average for nonGE plants, according to data from French grid operator RTE

To generate electricit­y, gas turbines heat a mixture of air and fuel at very high temperatur­es, causing the turbine blades to spin

analysed by Reuters, which excluded outages for planned maintenanc­e.

The French data also show that plants with GE turbines have closed for repairs or testing, on average, more than twice as often as non-GE gas-fuelled plants in France with turbines made by Alstom, Siemens and Ansaldo Energia. GE acquired Alstom’s power business in 2015.

GE and EDF officials said that the data from grid operator RTE, an independen­t subsidiary of EDF, are “not wrong” but should not be used to assess turbine performanc­e because some outages might be due to other equipment at the plants.

EDF said there are no problems at Bouchain, which opened in 2016, and that frequent shutdowns are not unusual for new plants during their break-in period. EDF said Bouchain’s output is cycled up and down to meet peaks in electricit­y demand rather than running constantly. The other gas-fired plants tracked by RTE also can be used for “peaking’ and have been in operation for many years.

RTE, Siemens, Ansaldo Energia and Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems declined to comment.

Reuters could not obtain comparable data on how often GE’s turbines shut down for repair at utilities around the world. Shutdowns are triggered when utilities determine that a plant needs to be serviced or tested, or when equipment failure or other problems cause the plant to shut down unexpected­ly.

While GE plants still produce a third of the world’s electricit­y, the company fell from first to third place in new turbine orders by capacity, behind Mitsubishi and Siemens, according to a first-half tally by McCoy Power Reports, a widely watched industry data source.

GE said its market share was 51 per cent in the third quarter, according to McCoy.

The turbine maker said it booked seven HA orders in the first nine months of this year, half as many as in the same period last year.

GE’s HA turbines have come under particular pressure and its plant repair business is facing growing competitio­n. The success of GE’s new turbines are of increasing importance as it slims down to focus on power plants, jet engines and wind turbines in a flurry of restructur­ing. The company spent more than two decades developing the 400-tonne machines, but brought them to market after rivals Siemens and Mitsubishi were gaining market share, forcing GE to catch up.

GE undercut its rivals’ prices by about 20 per cent “to go from 0 per cent to about 45 per cent share of this turbine class by 2016”, Morgan Stanley analysts said in a report this year.

Now chief executive Larry Culp is battling to restore GE’s profit and slash debt after the company lost $22.8 billion last quarter, mostly from its power unit, and its credit rating fell to just three notches above junk. Mr Culp is splitting up the power division, consolidat­ing its power headquarte­rs to cut costs and has named new leaders for it.

Demand for large gas turbines is at a 23-year low, forcing GE and rivals to fight hard for fewer deals as utilities buy more wind and solar systems that have become cost competitiv­e.

Scott Strazik, the new chief executive of GE Gas Power, said customers are happy with GE’s response to the blade issue and GE has no plans to change how it handles customer issues, or how it tests turbines, noting GE’s test facility is the largest and most comprehens­ive in the world.

“The HA is the fastest-selling gas turbine that we have, and customers continue to have a strong desire for the HA,” Mr Strazik said.

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A gas turbine is inspected at GE’s factory in Belfort, France. Repairs to its equipment are proving costly
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