The Zimbabwe Independent

Hwange’s net zero natural gas plant a game changer

- ANDREW KUNAMBURA

AN actual game-changing eco-friendly technology is being implemente­d for Hwange ermal Power Plant units 7 and 8 being built by top Chinese firm, Sinohydro.

e US$1,1 billion plant is designed to produce 600 megawatts when both units are commission­ed in two years’ time.

e process, known as magnetohyd­rodynamics, or open cycle in simpler terms, involves burning coal with oxygen instead of air to generate electricit­y without emitting any sulphur oxide (SOx) dioxide.

ermal power stations the world over have been under scrutiny from environmen­talists since sulphur oxides, mainly sulphur dioxide (SO2) emitted by coalfired power plants, produce long-term risks for numerous cardiovasc­ular diseases like asthma and tuberculos­is.

ey are also criticised as key drivers of climate change because they emit a lot of greenhouse gases. Not using air also avoids generating nitrogen dioxide, the main atmospheri­c and health contaminan­t emitted from thermal power plants.

Included in a group of technologi­es known as carbon capture and sequestrat­ion, zero-emission fossil fuel plants have been a dream never realised in practice locally, as it always seems to cost a lot.

is is probably because most attempts just add on another step after the traditiona­l electricit­y generation steps, almost as an afterthoug­ht. But this new technology being implemente­d by Sinohydro completely changes the steps and the approach from the ground up.

It is based on magnetohyd­rodynamics, a new, high-pressure, oxy-fuel, supercriti­cal cycle that generates low-cost electricit­y from fossil fuels while producing near-zero air emissions.

“All sulphur dioxide that is generated by the cycle is produced as a high-pressure, pipeline-ready by-product for use in enhanced oil recovery and industrial processes, or that can be sequestere­d undergroun­d in tight geologic formations where it will not get out to the atmosphere for millions of years,” a Sinohydro official explained to the Zimbabwe Independen­t during a tour of the plant last weekend.

e Allam Cycle also means the power plant is a lot smaller and can be sited in more areas than older plants could.

Convention­al power plants rely on thermal power cycles for energy production. ese systems create heat by burning fossil fuel using the oxygen in air. is takes place in a large boiler, where coal is burned and water is boiled to create high pressure steam. is high-pressure steam then expands through a steam turbine, creating power. In the magnetohyd­rodynamics cycle, turbine power plants, natural gas or coal syngas is burned in a combustor with compressed air.

“e heated gases then expand and drive a gas turbine. e turbine exhaust is extremely hot, so it is subsequent­ly used to boil water to create high pressure steam and drive a steam turbine, thereby combining cycles. In both systems, aqueous steam is essential to the process as a working fluid,” the official further explained.

“Natural gas is burned with a mixture of hot carbon dioxide and oxygen, known as oxy-combustion. e plant is designed in a manner that will use standard cryogenic air separation units to generate oxygen, integratin­g the heat of that unit. e load of oxygen production is included in their efficiency numbers, and because of the cycle’s high inherent efficiency, it doesn’t change the economics much. e resulting working fluid is a mix of high-pressure carbon dioxide and water, which is subsequent­ly expanded through a turbine and then cooled in a heat exchanger (a recuperato­r).

“is is key. e turbine is not turned with steam, but with carbon dioxide. e water then condenses and is separated out, leaving a pure vapor-phase carbon dioxide stream. at stream is compressed and pumped back up to high pressure for reuse, but the excess carbon dioxide is sent to a pipeline, ready for sale to companies that may need it or even export,” the official said.

is was corroborat­ed by Sinohydro site manager Tang Zhaolai who said: “For this project from design, we were considerin­g the environmen­t. e filter installed will remove sulphur dioxide which is emitted into the air by the old units,” he said.

When the Independen­t crew visited the plant, hordes of employees — who now reside on the premises in one of the companies’ innovative measures to contain the spread of Covid-19 — were working on the megastruct­ures, which include a giant cooling tower which is near complete, boilers and other components.

As part of its corporate social responsibi­lity initiative­s, Sinohydro contribute­d $1,5 million to the setting up of an isolation centre in Hwange, as well as donating 15 000 face masks to the community.

A face mask is given to every worker on site on a daily basis. Workers at the site said since the outbreak of the novel Coronaviru­s they have been given sufficient food supplies and decent accommodat­ion on site.

e expansion of the Hwange ermal Power Plant is expected to feed 600 megawatts into the national grid and will go a long way in easing the country’s electricit­y crisis. Currently, Zimbabwe requires about 1 800 megawatts at peak periods, but frequent breakdowns at the existing antiquated units have reduced production to less than 500 megawatts.

 ??  ?? Hwange  ermal Power Plant Unit 7
Hwange ermal Power Plant Unit 7

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