Muskingum River Power Plant

Muskingum River Power Plant
Location of Muskingum River Power Plant in Ohio
Country United States
Location Waterford Township, Washington County, near Beverly, Ohio
Coordinates 39°35′18″N 81°40′57″W / 39.58833°N 81.68250°W / 39.58833; -81.68250Coordinates: 39°35′18″N 81°40′57″W / 39.58833°N 81.68250°W / 39.58833; -81.68250
Status Decommissioned
Commission date Unit 1: December, 1953
Unit 2: June, 1954
Unit 3: December, 1957
Unit 4: May, 1958
Unit 5: October, 1968
Owner(s) AEP
Thermal power station
Primary fuel Bituminous coal
Type Steam
Cooling source Muskingum River
Unit 5: cooling tower
Power generation
Nameplate capacity 1,529 MWe

Muskingum River Power Plant is a major coal-fired power station, owned and operated by American Electric Power. It is on the west bank of Muskingum River, about 4 miles (6 km) northwest of the town of Beverly in the U.S. state of Ohio. At its peak, the plant powered three million households.[1]

Originally slated to be converted to run on natural gas, the Muskingum River Power Plant is slated to close entirely due to environmental regulations and market conditions at a cost of $150 million to $170 million.[1] Ohio's power consumption was noted as being "flat." The original proposal called for units one through four to be shuttered by December 31, 2014[2] and unit five to be converted to natural gas.[1] Approximately 95 employees will be laid off.

Units

Four out of five plant's units were among the oldest in the United States:[3]

Unit Nameplate capacity (MWe) Commissioned Decommissioned Notes
1 219.6 1953 2014
2 219.6 1954 2014
3 237.5 1957 2014
4 237.5 1958 2014
5 615.2 1968 2015 Supercritical unit, used closed-loop
water cooling via a cooling tower

Units 1–4 discharged their waste heat (about twice their combined electrical output) into Muskingum River.

Accidents and Incidents

2007 hydrogen explosion

On January 8, 2007, a hydrogen supply truck was making its routine weekly delivery of H2 gas to the station's hydrogen system, when an explosion occurred at 9:20 a.m. The truck driver was killed in the accident, and ten other people were injured. Premature failure of the pressure-relief device's rupture disc was blamed.[4]

Two civil trials in 2011, however, essentially rejected AEP's claims that rupture discs and a third party contractor were to blame. The juries determined that AEP had acted with "deliberate intent"[5] toward its own employee, Drumand McLaughlin, and with "conscious disregard" for the rights of the truck driver, Lewis Timmons, who was killed. A total of almost $13,000,000.00 was assessed in damages as of August 29, 2011, including punitive damages to punish AEP subsidiaries Ohio Power Company and American Electric Power Service Corporation for their misconduct in failing to maintain the hydrogen systems.[6] The companies were also to be assessed attorney's fees.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Gearino, Dan (12 July 2013). "AEP to close coal-fired power plant instead of converting". Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved 3 Mar 2015.
  2. Ward Jr., Ken (9 June 2011). "AEP would shutter 5 coal plants to meet EPA rules". Coal Tattoo. Charleston Gazette. Retrieved 3 Mar 2015.
  3. "Existing Electric Generating Units in the United States, 2006" (Excel). Energy Information Administration, U.S. Department of Energy. 2006. Retrieved 2008-07-14.
  4. Kenneth Frazier, Vice President for Safety and Health (2007). "Muskingum River Plant Hydrogen Explosion" (PPT). EEI. Retrieved December 2008. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  5. Brad Bauer (2011). "Injured AEP Worker gets 5.5 Million Dollar Award". Marietta Times. Retrieved July 2011. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  6. Kyla Asbury (2011). "Marshall Jury Returns $7,000,000.00 Verdict in AEP Blast Case". West Virginia Record. Retrieved August 2011. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
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