Automobile manufacturer BMW Group has once again turned to GE’s (NYSE: GE) Gas Engines distributed power technology by installing four
Jenbacher J616
cogeneration modules at BMW’s
Regensburg factory
in Bavaria, Germany. The cogeneration plant is generating 10.7 megawatts (MW) of reliable on-site power and meeting about 30 percent of the factory’s energy needs.
In addition to generating electricity, the cogeneration plant is capturing and utilizing 9.6 MW of engine waste heat to support the factory’s production processes. For example, the plant will combine the engine waste heat with existing boilers to provide heating during the winter.
The facility will have an electrical efficiency of up to 44.9 percent and a thermal efficiency of up to 40.4 percent, with a combined efficiency of up to 85.3 percent.
GE’s ecomagination-qualified
Jenbacher gas engines
are ideally suited to meet BMW’s stringent requirements for reliability, durability and efficiency. For example, in the event of a blackout or service disruption to the national grid, the natural gas-fueled CHP plant can continue to operate the Regensburg factory’s emergency lights.
Since the early 1980s, Jenbacher gas engines have been providing reliable on-site power and heat in several of the auto company’s production facilities.
In addition to supplying the Jenbacher CHP units, GE is installing piping, cabling and a ventilation system and dismantling the factory’s old power plant. GE also will provide services for the CHP plant under a comprehensive agreement.
“We are proud to once again use our gas engines to support a company like BMW, which has a reputation for high-quality production,” said Karl Wetzlaymer, general manager of gas engines for power generation-GE Power Water. “The Regensburg project clearly demonstrates the ability of our engines to ensure dependable and efficient local energy supplies that enable our industrial and trade customers to meet their production goals while also keeping their costs under control.
“The project illustrates the increased demand that GE is seeing for its fuel-flexible gas engines to help industrial and municipal customers throughout Europe generate their own on-site power and heat to meet their increasingly stringent environmental and energy efficiency goals,” Wetzlmayer noted.
The Regensburg factory CHP plant project is the latest
BMW
facility to utilize GE’s Jenbacher gas engines for reliable on-site power during the past four decades:
BMW plant
Steyr
Leipzig
Landshut
Regensburg
Jenbacher engines installed
4 x J420
1 x J620
2 x J420
4 x J616
Total electrical output
5.6 MW
3.0 MW
2.8 MW
10.7 MW
Total thermal output
6.1 MW
3.12 MW
2.75 MW
9.6 MW
Type of gas
Natural gas
Natural gas
Natural gas
Natural gas
Commissioning
1982/2008
2008
2007
2011
About GE
GE (NYSE: GE) works on things that matter. The best people and the best technologies taking on the toughest challenges. Finding solutions in energy, health and home, transportation and finance. Building, powering, moving and curing the world. Not just imagining. Doing. GE works. For more information, visit the company’s website at
www.ge.com
.
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@GE_PowerWater
.
1 Engines exchanged in 2008
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