Technology
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Coal
Coal Combustion By-products Aren’t All Bad: The Beneficial Use Solution
While it’s true that coal ash can be an environmental hazard if it’s not properly managed, there are a lot of positive uses for coal combustion products that actually provide benefits to the world. Many beneficial uses have been around for decades, but valuable new options are being developed, and some are starting to make […]
Tagged in:- coal combustion by-products
- STAR plant
- coal combustion products
- mine reclamation
- coal
- FGD gypsum
- acid mine drainage
- coal ash
- synthetic gypsum
- beneficial use
- fly ash
- gypsum
- rare earth elements
- We Energies
- ASHphalt
- boiler slag
- concrete
- cement
- American Coal Ash Association
- asphalt
- flue gas desulfurization
- ACAA
- bottom ash
- The SEFA Group
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Legal & Regulatory
Is an Automated Compliance Tracking Solution Right for You?
Like so many other power plant functions these days, regulatory and standards compliance can be automated. Know what you want an automated system to do before you make a vendor decision. As North American Electric Reliability Corp. (NERC) Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) enforcement deadlines and audit dates loom—notably, CIP-003-6 in April 2017, which addresses the […]
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O&M
High-Speed Turbine Rotor Balancing Lowers Costs and Improves Operation
High-speed turbine rotor balancing was once rare because of the costs and logistical challenges involved in doing it during an outage. That’s begun to change as economic options emerge, and experience is showing that high-speed balancing can pay big dividends in reliability and maintenance costs. To a maintenance engineer or fleet manager, unwanted vibration in […]
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Technology
Chronic Tardiness at South Africa’s Eskom Could Be Its Downfall
South Africa’s state-owned utility faces recent generation shortages, plant construction problems, load shedding, and uncertainty at the African continent’s only nuclear power plant. And that’s just on the generation side. Moves on the business planning and regulatory side are painfully slow and could, some argue, be writing the utility’s obituary. Eskom, South Africa’s state-owned monopoly […]
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Nuclear
Japan Kills Monju but Not Breeders
In a widely expected move, the Japanese government finally killed the ill-fated Monju breeder reactor project on September 21, but reasserted its faith in breeder reactor technology as a component of the nation’s future power mix. The Monju plant was an ambitious project that never came close to meeting its backers’ expectations. Launched in 1980, […]
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Renewables
Major Challenges in Further Renewable Integration, Report Says
Global resources of variable renewable energy—primarily wind and solar—despite breakneck growth over the past two decades, are beginning to run up against technological and policy limitations on further deployment, and future growth will depend on significant changes in policy and grid design, according to a new report. Released on September 20, Variable Renewable Energy Sources […]
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Nuclear
UK Approves Hinkley Point C Construction—with Caveats
The $23.8 billion Hinkley Point C nuclear project has received the UK government’s green light, but the country wants to ensure that project’s ownership cannot change without government agreement. After a “comprehensive review” of the project and a revised agreement with French power generator EDF, the UK Department for Business, Energy, and Industrial (DBEI) Strategy […]
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Renewables
New Solar Technology Promises Big Gains in Efficiency and Output
After years of incremental advances, a variety of innovations both simple and exotic are promising to boost the output of solar photovoltaic (PV) systems as much as 30% over current technologies—if the market can be convinced to adopt them. The Dawn of SiC For a generation, silicon has been the go-to material for semiconductor substrates. […]
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Renewables
DOE, DOI Roll Out National Strategy for 86 GW of Offshore Wind
A strategy rolled out by the Department of Energy (DOE) and Department of the Interior (DOI) to enable 86 GW of offshore wind capacity in the U.S. by 2050 highlights a number of key hurdles, including those related to technology, regulations, the environment, and markets. The DOE’s and DOI’s September 9–released joint document, “National Offshore […]
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Hydro
OSU Develops Open-Source Tool to Assess Run-of-River Resource Potential
A new assessment tool developed by engineers at Oregon State University (OSU) could allow people, agencies, and communities interested in developing small-scale hydropower plants in remote places to easily and accurately assess whether a potential project would meet their current and future energy needs. The free, open-source computer modeling package dubbed the Hydropower Potential Assessment […]
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