Consumables
KGRA Energy Secures Long Term Contract with Weyerhaeuser Company
Wednesday 27. April 2011 - 800 kW Waste Heat Recovery System Slated for Delivery in Q3 2011
KGRA Energy LP, a premier U.S.-based waste heat recovery developer, announced today that it has signed a contract with Weyerhaeuser Company (NYSE:WY), one of the world’s largest forest products companies. KGRA’s subsidiary Ayden HTP Partners LLC will design and construct the 800kW waste heat recovery system at Weyerhaeuser’s Greenville, NC lumber mill. The system, which is scheduled to come online in the summer of 2011, will recover waste heat from Weyerhaeuser’s biomass-based thermal drying system to generate 4.5 million kWh of CO2-free electricity per year. KGRA’s system will displace the equivalent of more than 9 million pounds of carbon dioxide each year.
“KGRA is pleased to be selected by Weyerhaeuser, a leader in innovation and corporate sustainability, as a partner on this important waste heat recovery project,” said Jason Gold, KGRA Energy Chief Executive Officer. “We look forward to expanding our relationship with Weyerhaeuser as the organization identifies ways to lower energy costs and reduce its carbon footprint at its forest products facilities across the country.”
“We are pleased to be working with KGRA Energy and its partner TAS Energy on this project,” said John Ryan, Region Energy Manager at Weyerhaeuser. “The technology the company uses is designed to produce clean energy, while reducing our emissions and lowering the plant’s electricity bill.”
KGRA Energy’s system uses the organic Rankine cycle to recover waste heat from viable sources, such as combustion engine exhausts, furnaces, boilers, and kilns, converting it into usable CO2-free electricity, which lowers energy costs as well as heat pollution. KGRA’s systems are modular and scalable, providing the ability to produce power from smaller and lower-temperature heat sources previously deemed unsuitable for standard cogeneration. KGRA projects are customized for the direct needs and specifications of each customer. At the Weyerhaeuser lumber mill, heat will be recovered from a kiln where cut lumber enters the drying process.
The organic Rankine cycle equipment that will be installed in Weyerhaeuser’s Greenville, NC lumber mill will be made in America. Additionally, the project is expected to create 19.7 American jobs throughout the development, construction and installation process.
Weyerhaeuser and Ayden HTP Partners LLC, a joint-venture between KGRA Energy and the ORC equipment supplier, TAS Energy LLC, a subsidiary of Turbine Air Systems, LTD, completed the agreement in March 2011. Installation of the project is expected to begin in June and the plant intends to be operational by the end of July 2011.