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Exelon
Power, a unit of Exelon Corporation, recently completed upgrades
to its Southeast Chicago Energy Project to provide increased stability
to the regional power system in the event of a regional power failure.
The company upgraded the blackstart capabilities
of its eight-unit, 350- megawatt (MW) plant to assist in restarting
Exelon's larger nuclear units and other regional fossil plants in
the event of a blackout similar to the one that affected the Northeast
in August 2003.
A blackstart unit is defined as a generating
unit that is able to start without an outside electricity supply
or demonstrated ability of a base unit to remain operating, at reduced
levels, when automatically disconnected from the energy grid. A
blackstart plant is a power plant that includes one or more blackstart
units.
The Southeast Chicago plant previously had
Category Two blackstart capability, meaning the plant is self-sufficient
to maintain essential functions when disconnected from the power
grid, but requires power from the grid to restart, making it the
second unit on line after a system outage.
"This blackstart upgrade allows us to
ensure we have the required energy to be a reliable source of power
should a major system blackout occur," said Mark Schiavoni,
vice president of Exelon Power Operations.
"This is a state-of-the-art plant, equipped
with some of the best technology available," said Schiavoni.
"Upgrading the blackstart capabilities provides additional
security to the ComEd system."
In order to upgrade the plant, a number of
projects had to be completed. The plant required 6,000 kilowatts
of self-sufficient capacity in order to start the first fuel gas
compressor and the first combustion turbine starting motor. To provide
the required capacity, Exelon installed three, 2-MW diesel generators
on site.
While blackstart units are not used often,
they are an integral part of a system's contingency plans in the
event of a system blackout. In the event of a blackout on the ComEd
distribution system, Southeast Chicago Energy Project is able to
begin generation and re-establish power onto the grid for larger
plants that require offsite generation to begin operation.

•Date:
23rd March 2004 •Region: N.America •Type:
Article •Topic: Power
management
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