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Friday, November 7, 2008 10:17 PM CST
Eastern plans new energy center
Plant would be located on east side of campus



CHARLESTON — Eastern Illinois University officials plan to move forward with construction of a $40 million Renewable Energy Center on the east side of campus.

The result will be an economical and ecologically friendly answer to Eastern’s power needs, made necessary by the deterioration of the university’s current coal-fired power plant, officials said. Built around 1925, the plant has been plagued by persistent equipment failures. Replacement parts have been difficult, if not impossible, to find due to the age of the equipment.

In an effort to share information and answer questions about the new facility, three informational meetings have been scheduled:

n 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Life Science Building, Room 3080, EIU campus

n 10 a.m. Friday, Charleston/Mattoon Room, Martin Luther King Jr. Union, EIU campus

n 6:30 p.m. Nov. 17, Charleston Public Library, Rotary Room A.

The public is invited to the meetings, where campus officials plan to present the concept of the new center and respond to questions.

Groundbreaking is scheduled for spring, with a plant “commissioning” in fall 2010.

The plant will occupy existing university property located near the intersection of 18th Street (Illinois Route 130) and Edgar Drive.

The new Renewable Energy Center is a “biomass gasifier” that will supply the university’s heating and cooling needs by burning plant matter. Eastern will be permitted to burn two-inch virgin, or non-treated, wood chips obtained as by-products from the lumber industry.

While considering alternatives to the old steam plant, university officials factored in campus needs, as well as environmental impact. The location of the Renewable Energy Center along Illinois 130 — a site chosen in accordance with Eastern’s Campus Master Plan — will allow easy access to semitrailers hauling product, while keeping the heavy vehicles off the narrow roads in the center of campus.

According to Gary Reed, director of EIU’s Facilities Planning and Management, the Renewable Energy Center will receive four to five semitrailers a day during normal business hours (between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays). There may be additional trucks on Fridays as the university prepares accordingly for the energy needs of the coming weekend.

The wood chips will be much more “clean burning” than the coal used currently, thus reducing the overall air emissions being released into the environment. Reed said that wood gasification is similar in many respects to a gas furnace in most homes, and that area residents need not worry about odors or smoke like those associated with a regular wood stove.

Ash from the burns will be collected in closed dumpsters at a rate of about one cubic yard in a 24-hour period. According to Reed, the university is looking into uses for the ash, which is high in potash and could possibly be used as fertilizer.

“EIU is no stranger to initiating environmentally friendly projects,” Reed said. “Since 1995, the university has reduced its consumption of electricity, fuels and water by more than 30 percent. We were extremely proud when the 93rd Illinois General Assembly recognized Eastern as the university having the lowest energy cost per square foot among all Illinois public universities.“

The center will sit 125 feet west of Route 130. The tallest object on the project will be an approximately 120-foot-high bucket elevator, responsible for loading wood chips into the fuel silo. The wood gasifier chimney will stand at approximately 50 feet. (For comparison purposes, Eastern’s water tower south of Old Main is 135 feet tall.)

According to Reed, plant operation will be neighborhood-friendly — quiet with low light, especially during the evening hours.

“Treescape” will be maintained to soften the development and blend into the neighborhood environment as well as possible.

The projected cost of Eastern’s Renewable Energy Center represents approximately half of the roughly $80 million Eastern intends to spend on renovations and new energy conservation projects identified through a campus-wide audit conducted by Honeywell International.

Measures identified by Honeywell are designed to be self-funded with energy savings, and Honeywell guarantees that Eastern will have utility and/or operational cost savings at least equal to the costs of financing the conservation projects.

In addition to the power plant, the audit examined electrical upgrades, upgrades to the university’s electrical grid connection and possibilities for wind energy generation.

As a result, Eastern is also planning to construct a small wind farm — composed of three 1.5 megawatt General Electric wind turbines — somewhere near Charleston. Exact locations have not yet been announced, pending ongoing discussions, Reed said.

 


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1 cav wrote on Nov 8, 2008 1:40 PM:

" Where are these 4-5 semi of wood chips going to come from ??
So much for clean coal burning scrubbers and thousands of tax dollars putting all of this environmental cleaning stuff in.
Guess we don't need FutureGen now. "

Raptor wrote on Nov 9, 2008 4:42 PM:

" For 25 million they could get a nuclear power generator from Hyperion Power Generation Inc. out of New Mexico.

It's renewable, small, produces no greenhouse gases and can serve 20,000 average size American homes.

It would be a profit center. "

soybeanpod wrote on Nov 10, 2008 7:28 AM:

" Kinda hard to conceive that those few loads of woodchips will take care of EIU. How about during blizzards and other bad weather conditions with deliveries. Don't think we should move backward in this country. When I first read the article I thought it might be a joke. We gave up wood for coal years ago. Kinda like the mini nuclear project idea. Maybe help with the state's deficit and the retirement fund of the state. "

Harry Potter wrote on Nov 10, 2008 8:25 AM:

" I though they said they solved all of the problems a few years ago with all those dollars they invested in the coal scrubbers at the existing plant. Silly me, it's only 40 million.... "

 



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