Friday, May 25, 2012
By KHRISNA VIRGIL
kvirgil@tribunemedia.net
PLANS are in the works to catapult the Bahamas Electricity Corporation to the cutting edge of modern technology, Permanent Secretary of Works and Urban Development Renward Wells said yesterday.
While admitting he could not say a great deal about these plans, so as not to preempt any official announcements by Prime Minister Perry Christie, Mr Wells said major upgrades could be forthcoming.
He said: "We intend in every sense of the word to bring BEC into the modern era in terms of the fuel we use, the electricity we generate, and renewables.
"The PLP is very much in tune with the whole idea of bringing BEC into the 21st century.
"That is all I am prepared to say until the PM has made an official announcement concerning the board for BEC."
On May 5, chairman of the corporation's board, Michael Moss, announced two major investments for BEC: a $23.7 million contract with Japanese conglomerate Hitachi to install a 24-megawatt combustion turbine generator and the $6 million rental of a generator to reduce the number of black outs this summer.
The new Hitachi generator is not slated for installation until the summer of 2013.
Last summer, thousands of consumers expressed anger after being plagued with frequent blackouts.
Insufficient capacity resulting from malfunctioning generators and regular repairs forced BEC to regularly schedule load shedding for several communities in New Providence.
At the time, the general manager of the corporation said renting more equipment was a necessity as improvements to four of BEC's newest gas turbines would not be completed until sometime this year.
Former environment minister Earl Deveaux, who oversaw the corporation, said the demand for BEC's services would continue to expand with a growing population.
Comments
Observer says...
Please get it right; Mr. Well is not 'permanent secretary'. His position is Parliamentary Secretary. Please make the correction.
Posted 25 May 2012, 3:32 p.m. Suggest removal
notsogullible says...
Observer, he is also "Mr. Wells" not 'Mr. Well'! Correct not lest ye also be subject to correction!
Posted 26 May 2012, 1:36 p.m. Suggest removal
paul_vincent_zecchino says...
Does combustion turbine in the article mean a jet engine fueld by Number 6 oil or natural gas which is used to spin a generator?
Will the combustion turbine be a combined-cycle installation, in which the combustion turbine spins a first generator and the turbine's hot exhaust heats water to steam to spin a second dynamo?
Does BEC presently have any steam turbines? If not, did it at one time? Many stateside oil-fired steam turbines in America have been converted to jet-powered combined cycle facilities. This often more than triples power output while reducing emissions by something like eighty-percent. Interesting, encouraging development, isn't it?
Combustion turbines or 'jets' can start quickly and hit full power almost instantly. This makes them ideal for peaking output when electrical demand is high.
Great news.
Paul Vincent Zecchino
Manasota Key, Florida
26 May, 2012
Posted 26 May 2012, 12:55 a.m. Suggest removal
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