McMinnville Electric System Brochure

Page 1

T H E M AG A Z I N E F O R

C A P TA I N S O F I N D U S T R Y

ENERGY LEADERS TODAY www.energyleaderstoday.com

Spring 2010 $24.00 USD $25.28CAN

McMinnville Electric T he Tennessee Valley Authority never thought McMinnville Electric System would be able to run a 1.6 megawatt generator on biodiesel with an equal efficiency and output as petroleum. Rodney Boyd, CEO and GM of McMinnville took them up on the challenge and the biodiesel generator actually ran better.


Energy Leaders

Editor-in-Chief Todd Weaver

Editor Diana Doyle Executive Editor Jonathan Mack Assistant Editor Joseph Orange Creative Director Art Director Photography Director Video Director

Emily Detoro Stephanie Hess Ian Palmer Susan Maybach

Editorial Director Kate Darling Editorial Production Michael DeMatteo Production Coordinator Julian Vu Content Directors Aaron McGaskey (SW) Juan Stewart (NE) Brandon McBride (W) Steve Peters (Nation) Juan Orellana (Intnl) Vendor Relations Director Diana Stephens Vendor Relations Dov Teta Eric Banner Patrick Storm Advertising Sales Director Peter Jostens Advertising Sales Moe Kazemi Steve Stone David Levi Publisher Steve Reed

oZ WORLD MEDIA, LLC 1330 New Hampshire Avenue Suite B1 Washington D.C. 20036 www.energyleaderstoday.com Energy Leaders Today is a quarterly B2B trade journal that services the energy industry in solar, geothermal, hydro/tidal/wave, natural gas, wind, nuclear, oil, biofuels, coal & electric, and new technology sectors. ELT has a readership of 50,000 C-Level executives within the energy industry. We do not accept subscription requests from the general public, however an abbreviated version is available on our website.



corporate profile | coal & electric

Generating

Power In Hopes of Clean Energy

McMinnville Electric has been ‘keeping the lights on’ for 70 years and has its hopes set on cleaner renewable energy for the future. By Rebecca Rodriguez

4 Energy Leaders Today Winter 2009


coal & electric | corporate profile

T he Tennessee Valley Authority never thought McMinnville Electric System would be able to run a 1.6 megawatt generator on biodiesel with an equal efficiency and output as petroleum. But Rodney Boyd, CEO and General Manager of McMinnville Electric System, took them up on the challenge. The biodiesel generator actually ran better. The result was a “triple wow,” said Boyd of the accomplishment with this small power distribution system tucked in the Tennessee valley. “At 1000 hours of operation, the engine did not show any signs of wear while running at top capacity,” Boyd said. Using a 3516B Caterpillar generator, McMinnville Electric generated 1,629,024 kWhs of renewable electric power using 124,000 gallons of soybeanbased, American-made biodiesel as fuel during a test run of about 1,000 operating hours. Biodiesel is a renewable fuel made from soybean oil that burns cleaner and reduces the risk to human health and to the environment that one would see with petroleum diesel. McMinnville set a precedent by becoming the first municipal utility company in America to run a biodiesel generator at such capacity. The accomplishment was part of a 2001, $982,000 grant from the U.S. Dept. of Energy, in which McMinnville coordinated the operations and testing with the help of EmeraChem, Stowers/Caterpillar, the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), the National BioDiesel Board (NBB), the American Public Power Association (APPA), AgriEnergy, and the Tennessee Soybean Grower’s Association. The project had its share of challenges, Boyd said. One was reducing the amount of nitrogen oxides (NOx) emissions. In its quest toward clean energy, Boyd said they achieved a 96.6 percent NOx reduction, verified by the TVA. The generating process reforms biodiesel into hydrogen, thereby eliminating the ammonia and urea pollutants associated with petroleum. Petroleum diesel is easily recognizable by the dark fumes it gives off, but Boyd said when the generator ran on

It snowed from that night until 2 p.m. the next day and we didn’t get a single call. I knew it was a good system and well-maintained but I didn’t know it was that good.

biodiesel, the blue sky remained crystal will help get the biodiesel generator clear. development back on track and make “You can’t tell it’s running. You can only it work. hear it,” he said. “I know the process and the technology The project, however, stalled when it it takes. And probably with additional was tripped up by a little $1 fuel filter funding we could pick it back up,” Boyd that burned a hole in the NOx trap said, adding that the burned plasma (plasma reformer). It was rebuilt, but reformer needs to be repaired first. did not return to normal operation. Interest is picking up recently, and “The bad news is we were never able to Caterpillar flew some interested sustain our (NOx) reduction numbers parties in from Argentina so Boyd could over a long period of time,” Boyd said. run the generator for them to see. The equipment is being rebuilt and “It’s just about getting the word out,” he the biodiesel generator now acts as said. “Since the time we started on that backup to the existing 11 generators project, the National Biodiesel Board at McMinnville. The generator can run meeting has just exploded. There’s independently of the plasma reformer. much more interest now.” Because McMinnville Electric is a Boyd is proud of his work with the TVA distributor, Boyd can’t generate biodiesel project, which he petitioned the power for himself. He can only for shortly after joining the company sell it back to TVA, and they do not in 2000 as general manager. Before recognize biodiesel as a “green” source. heading to McMinnville Electric, Boyd Only solar, wind, and landfill gas is worked with a north Georgia electric considered clean energy by TVA. This co-op for 21 years, part of which time is because the use of biodiesel for electric generation has not been included as a qualifying resource in any proposed, national Renewable Energy Portfolio Standards legislation. It is frustrating having it just sit, Boyd said. He hopes TVA, who McMinnville WWW.CENTRALMETER.COM Electric System 331 NORTH FRONT STREET • MURFREESBORO, TN 37130 generates power for,

Energy Leaders Today Winter 2009 5


corporate corporate| profile | coal & electric

he earned his master’s degree in business. McMinnville Electric celebrated its 70 th birthday in 2009 and Boyd said the company prides itself on “keeping the lights on.” Reliability is one of the company’s strongest suits. “What we’re known for is being able to weather storms,” he said, noting that he soon discovered something unique about McMinnville Electric after he came to work for them. Boyd recalled coming into work to handle the phone calls during a bad snow storm that hit the region. “It snowed from that night until 2 p.m. the next day and we didn’t get a single call,” he said. “I knew it was a good system and well-maintained but I didn’t know it was that good.” 6 Energy Leaders TodayWinter Winter 2009 6 Energy Leaders Today 2009

Boyd commended his staff, some of which have been with the company for more than 30 years, for maintaining the company’s reliability. The American Public Power Association (APPA) rated McMinnville Electric in the top 5 percent in the nation in reliability for its size company. McMinnville has 31 employees and an annual electric sales revenue of $20 million. The state of the economy has hit the central Tennessee valley hard, Boyd said. The region is not seeing a lot of industrial growth, and the company’s Enhanced Growth Credit program is not seeing a lot of action. The program acts as an economic development tool by providing substantial credits on power bills for companies


coal & electriccorporate | corporate | profile profile

that move to the Tennessee valley or expand. But big companies are leaving and job growth is down. “Since I’ve been here, we’ve lost seven megawatts of industrial load,” Boyd said. “Folks that come in don’t use as much electricity as the ones that leave.” Boyd sees an improvement coming soon, but mostly on the residential side. He also stresses that the company’s focus for the future is attracting the attention of data centers. Some are looking, Boyd said. A telephone co-op right next to McMinnville Electric has some of the highest networking speeds available in the Southeastern region. “If you couple light speed Internet capability with reliability, it’s a natural fit for a data center to come in,” he said.

Boyd added that McMinnville Electric is especially attractive because it is centrally located in the state, between two major highways, an hour from two major airports, and two hours from Knoxville. Along with commercial growth, Boyd has great expectations for green energy in years to come. His goal is to get the biodiesel generator back on its feet and let the blue sky shine. Green energy produced 24 hours a day is within sight, he said. “Hopefully we can pick back up on the biodiesel project and count that as a success,” Boyd said. ELT

Energy Leaders TodayWinter Winter 2009 Energy Leaders Today 2009 7 7


T H E M AG A Z I N E F O R

C A P TA I N S O F I N D U S T R Y

ENERGY LEADERS TODAY www.energyleaderstoday.com

TO ADVERTISE CONTACT US AT: Energy Leaders Today oZ World Media LLC 1330 New Hampshire Ave NW Suite B1 Washington D.C. 20036 202.470.6757 Tel / 202.280.1075 Fax info@energyleaderstoday.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.