Duke Energy Edvardsport IGCC
Duke Energy Edvardsport IGCC
Duke Energy Edvardsport IGCC
Project Overview
In November 2007, Duke Energy received approval
from the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission
to build a cleaner-coal integrated gasification
combined cycle (IGCC) plant at Duke Energy’s
160-megawatt Edwardsport Station in Knox
County, Indiana.
In light of the volatile price of oil and limited supplies of natural gas available, coal is one of the most
practical alternatives for addressing Duke Energy’s additional baseload power needs in Indiana. Building the
Edwardsport IGCC plant ensures that Duke Energy customers in Indiana will continue to have fairly priced,
reliable energy that will help our economy grow.
Potential Benefits
• Advanced clean coal technology plant with lower air emissions, less use of water, less solids generated,
and generally higher efficiency than a conventional pulverized coal plant with currently required pollution
control equipment.
• Retirement of current circa 1940s 160-megawatt Edwardsport power plant.
• Ability to use Indiana and Midwestern coal.
• The plant will employ an estimated 77-97 people. The majority of the positions would be high-
skill/high-paying with an estimated annual payroll of $7 to $9 million. Total estimated jobs include
Duke Energy and non-Duke Energy personnel at the plant site.
• Construction jobs would average an estimated 800-900 during the three-year construction period.
During peak construction, the number would increase to approximately 2,000.
• Increased tax base for local and state economies.
• Potential for carbon dioxide capture and sequestration in the future.
Cost
We are estimating a 630-megawatt IGCC plant will cost approximately $2.3 billion. The project has been
awarded local, state and federal tax incentives totaling more than $460 million.
Duke Energy
Corporate Headquarters
526 South Church Street
Charlotte, NC 28202-1802
www.duke-energy.com
06/08
How It Works
IGCC uses a coal gasification system to convert coal into a synthesis gas (syngas) and produce steam.
The hot syngas is processed to remove sulfur compounds, mercury and particulate matter before it is used
to fuel a combustion turbine generator, which produces electricity. The heat in the exhaust gases from the
combustion turbine is recovered to generate additional steam. This steam, along with that from the syngas
process, then drives a steam turbine generator to produce additional electricity.
INTEGRATED AIR
NITROGEN
PARTICULATE
AIR REMOVAL SULFUR
BYPRODUCT
OXYGEN
MAIN AIR MERCURY SYNGAS
COMPRESSOR REMOVAL CLEANUP
AIR SEPARATION UNIT GASIFIER
CLEAN
SYNGAS
SLAG
BYPRODUCT
EXHAUST HEAT
STEAM
HEAT RECOVERY GENERATOR
STEAM GENERATOR STEAM TURBINE
Coal gasification has seen worldwide use in chemical plant applications since the early 1900s. Through U.S.
Department of Energy clean coal programs, it was developed for IGCC applications on a larger scale in the
1980s and demonstrated in a commercial setting in the mid-1990s. Currently, there are 16 sites worldwide,
four of which use coal/petroleum coke for the sole purpose of generating electricity. In the United States,
Duke Energy’s predecessor company, PSI Energy, and Tampa Electric have been involved in demonstrating
the technology over the past 12 years.
Environmental Performance
The comparison below is between the New Source Performance Standards environmental emission limits on
a coal-fired power plant and the expected emission performance of the new Edwardsport facility.
www.duke-energy.com
06/08