The Keystone Generating Station is a 1.71-gigawatt (1,711 MW),
coal power plant located on roughly in
Plumcreek Township, southeastern
Armstrong County, Pennsylvania
Armstrong County is a county in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. As of the 2020 census, the population was 65,558. The county seat is Kittanning. The county was organized on March 12, 1800, from parts of Allegheny, Westmoreland and Lycom ...
near
Crooked Creek, just west of
Shelocta, Pennsylvania.
The plant was built in 1967, and expanded in 1968. It has had a number of improvements made over the years to reduce the level of environmental pollution, especially measures to cut down acidic emissions of nitrogen and sulphur oxides.
The power plant will close by or before December 31, 2028, as a result of a new wastewater rule that prohibits coal power plants from dumping
mercury,
arsenic
Arsenic is a chemical element; it has Symbol (chemistry), symbol As and atomic number 33. It is a metalloid and one of the pnictogens, and therefore shares many properties with its group 15 neighbors phosphorus and antimony. Arsenic is not ...
, and
selenium
Selenium is a chemical element; it has symbol (chemistry), symbol Se and atomic number 34. It has various physical appearances, including a brick-red powder, a vitreous black solid, and a grey metallic-looking form. It seldom occurs in this elem ...
into streams and rivers, along with the
Conemaugh Generating Station and at least 24 other power plants in 14 states.
Technical specifications
The facility consists of two
steam turbine
A steam turbine or steam turbine engine is a machine or heat engine that extracts thermal energy from pressurized steam and uses it to do mechanical work utilising a rotating output shaft. Its modern manifestation was invented by Sir Charles Par ...
s, which began commercial operation in 1967 and 1968, and four
cooling tower
A cooling tower is a device that rejects waste heat to the atmosphere through the cooling of a coolant stream, usually a water stream, to a lower temperature. Cooling towers may either use the evaporation of water to remove heat and cool the ...
s.
The main turbines run on
steam
Steam is water vapor, often mixed with air or an aerosol of liquid water droplets. This may occur due to evaporation or due to boiling, where heat is applied until water reaches the enthalpy of vaporization. Saturated or superheated steam is inv ...
produced by twin 850 MW
boiler
A boiler is a closed vessel in which fluid (generally water) is heated. The fluid does not necessarily boil. The heated or vaporized fluid exits the boiler for use in various processes or heating applications, including water heating, centra ...
s, each as tall as a 14-story building. The plant uses in excess of four million tons of coal a year. The plant ranks among the best in the US in terms of availability among coal plants of the same size.
Each unit is a Westinghouse cross-compound dual steam turbine-generator operating at supercritical steam conditions. At the time Keystone was constructed, Units 1 and 2 were the largest generating units in the world. Keystone was the first plant to be constructed away from a significant source of cooling water. The
Keystone Reservoir was constructed on the North Branch of Plum Creek, a tributary of Crooked Creek to provide a constant source of
cooling water for the plant's thermodynamic cycle year round. The cooling tower system at Keystone marks one of the most significant of early environmental controls on large power plants in the United States (thermal pollution of waterways was one of the first types of pollution to experience significant controls).
The plant's steam generators each produce approximately seven million lbs. of steam per hour at 3,800 psi and 1,005 deg. F., with a single reheat to the same temperature. Each unit has two boiler feed pumps, one of which is run by its own steam turbine, and the other of which is powered via the low-pressure turbine-generator through a fluid coupling (so rpm may be varied to maintain the proper boiler feedwater flow and pressure). An auxiliary boiler provides steam for the feed pump with its own turbine in order to provide flow through the boiler at startup without drawing power off the grid. One of the earlier supercritical plants in the country, the boiler design incorporates an improvement over the first full-scale supercritical units at Eddystone Electric Generating Station, near Philadelphia. This improvement is a re-circulation circuit that increases water flow through the water walls surrounding the lower furnace in order to protect them during startup with considerably less flow through the entire boiler, thus saving fuel wasted as boiler flow is bypassed to the condenser during startup.
Since the plant's initial commissioning, several environmental control systems have either been upgraded or installed. These include modifications to the
electrostatic precipitators, the addition of an
ammonia
Ammonia is an inorganic chemical compound of nitrogen and hydrogen with the chemical formula, formula . A Binary compounds of hydrogen, stable binary hydride and the simplest pnictogen hydride, ammonia is a colourless gas with a distinctive pu ...
flue gas conditioning system to improve precipitator performance, and a low/ burner system to reduce the oxides of nitrogen () emissions. A
Selective Catalytic Reactor (SCR) further reduces the emissions. In 2009 a wet
flue-gas desulfurization system was put in place to reduce sulfur dioxide and heavy metal emissions. The plant has a continuous emissions monitoring system in the stack which must adhere to very rigid accuracy and reliability requirements established by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
A consortium of mid-atlantic power companies owns the plant. PSEG Fossil owns a 22.84 percent share (391 net MW with peaker), while Reliant Resources, operates it. The plant is basically a twin of the
Conemaugh Generating Station, also partially owned by PSEG Fossil.
Key Facts:
Location: Shelocta, PA
MW: 1,711
Fuel: Coal
Commercial Operation: Unit 1: 1967, Unit 2: 1968
Ownership: 22.84% PSEG Fossil
Owners
(partial list of 78.26%)
*
Public Service Enterprise Group: 22.84% or 391 Megawatts
*
ArcLight Capital Partners: 20.91% or 358 Megawatts
*
Reliant Energy
Reliant Energy Retail Holding, LLC is an American energy company based in Houston, Texas. It serves the state of Texas.
History
Headquartered in Houston, Texas, Reliant Energy, a subsidiary of NRG Energy, is one of the largest Texas electricity ...
(operator): 16% or 274 Megawatts
*
PPL Montour LLC: 12.34% or 211 Megawatts
*
NRG Energy: 3.7% or 63 Megawatts
*
Duquesne Light Holdings: 2.47% or 42.3 Megawatts (this part was previously owned by
Atlantic City Electric
Exelon Corporation is an American public utility headquartered in Chicago, and incorporated in Pennsylvania. Exelon is the largest electric parent company in the United States by revenue and is the largest regulated electric utility in the Uni ...
)
Emissions
Keystone was outfitted with a wet limestone scrubber system in late 2009 to partially remove heavy metals and
sulfur dioxide
Sulfur dioxide (IUPAC-recommended spelling) or sulphur dioxide (traditional Commonwealth English) is the chemical compound with the formula . It is a colorless gas with a pungent smell that is responsible for the odor of burnt matches. It is r ...
from the emitted
flue gas.
While the plant has had SCR technology in place since 2003 to reduce emissions of nitrogen oxides, after 2010 operation of this equipment during the ozone season (May – September) was severely curtailed. Emission rates for nitrogen oxides during the 2011 and 2012 ozone seasons reverted to essentially what they had been prior to SCR start up in 2003, resulting in the release of approximately 9,000 additional tons of per season over what could have been achieved with full operation of this pollution control technology.
Following the implementation of Pennsylvania’s Reasonably Available Control Technology rule (RACT 2) in 2017 which imposed more stringent emission requirements, emission rates fell that year by 79% from 2011, the year of peak SCR curtailment.
[Pennsylvania Code § 129.97. Presumptive RACT requirements, RACT emission limitations and petition for alternative compliance schedule, https://www.pacode.com/secure/data/025/chapter129/s129.97.html]
See also
*
List of power stations in Pennsylvania
References
Based on a visit to the plant in approx. February 1967 by John M. Baxter
External links
PSEG FossilNational ranking{Dead link, date=February 2020 , bot=InternetArchiveBot , fix-attempted=yes
Article on mercury emissionsArticle
Energy infrastructure completed in 1967
Energy infrastructure completed in 1968
Towers completed in 1967
Chimneys in the United States
Coal-fired power stations in Pennsylvania
Buildings and structures in Armstrong County, Pennsylvania
Public Service Enterprise Group