CPV Fairview the First to Burn Ethane for Electricity

Competitive Power Ventures Inc. (CPV) announced last week that its power plant in Central Pennsylvania has tested new technology that will allow the plant to blend ethane with natural gas to generate electricity. CPV’s Fairview Energy Center in Cambria County is the first to develop and test such technology.

  • The General Electric Co. combustion system technology enables the plant to blend 25% ethane with 75% natural gas. The ethane would come from the Marcellus Shale and transported via the Mariner East pipeline.
  • If the cost of natural gas increases, this new technology will allow flexibility to maintain grid reliability while providing cost effective rates to consumers.
  • Even though producers might not accept ethane into the gas stream considering the current weak economic outlook, the ability to blend will help CPV Fairview if and when the market shifts.

Natural Gas Intel’s Full Text: Pennsylvania Power Plant Said First to Tap Ethane for Electricity

Competitive Power Ventures Inc. (CPV) said this week that it is prepared to burn ethane at its new natural gas-fired power plant in Central Pennsylvania after successfully testing new technology.

Tests have been completed at the Fairview Energy Center in Cambria County, which CPV said is the only facility of its kind in the world capable of blending ethane with natural gas to generate electricity.

The 1,050 megawatt (MW) plant utilizes a combustion system developed by General Electric Co. capable of blending 25% ethane with 75% natural gas to generate electricity.

“Should the cost of natural gas increase, CPV Fairview’s flexibility within its fuel sources allows the plant to maintain grid reliability and provide cost-effective rates to consumers, without compromising emissions or efficiency,” the company said.

Fairview entered service late last year as part of a wave of gas-fired plants that have been built across Appalachia to utilize low-cost shale gas produced in fields located to the northeast and southwest of the facility. The Mariner East pipeline system, which moves natural gas liquids across the state, has a delivery point onsite to feed the plant ethane.

Both natural gas and oil have traded at extraordinary lows this month due to oversupply and a weak economic outlook brought on by the spread of the coronavirus. The collapse in energy prices also has widened the spread between the value of natural gas and ethane.

Genscape Inc. noted Wednesday that the forward spread for this summer shows the value of ethane at 67 cents/MMBtu less than natural gas, meaning that it would cost “more to extract and process ethane out of a raw gas stream than one can sell the processed ethane for.”

While producers are likely to reject ethane into the gas stream for now given the spread, and gas remains highly competitive in the power stack, the ability to blend could improve the plant’s economics in the future if the market shifts.

“This opens up new areas of opportunity to consider for developing plants where natural gas and ethane are available,” the company said.

Maryland-based CPV has an interest in 4.2 gigawatts of power generation across the country. It manages more than 9,300 MW of fossil fuel and renewable generation facilities, most of which are powered by natural gas.