Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Power Plant, Mississippi (2023)

Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Power Plant, Mississippi (1)

Mississippi Power's coal-to-gas plant at Kemper county will be operational from 2015. Image courtesy of Mississippi Power.

Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Power Plant, Mississippi (2)

The Kemper county energy facility will use the Transport Integrated Gasification (TRIG) technology. Image courtesy of Mississippi Power.

Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Power Plant, Mississippi (3)

The IGCC power plant at Kemper county is expected to cost $3.42bn. Image courtesy of Mississippi Power.

Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Power Plant, Mississippi (4)

The combined cycle unit of Kemper County IGCC power plant started commercial production in August 2014.

Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Power Plant, Mississippi (5)

(Video) Mississippi Power’s Kemper County IGCC Facility Update:

Mississippi Power has set up an integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) plant in Kemper County, Mississippi, US, in 2014. The plant has an installed capacity of 582MW and uses lignite (brown coal) as fuel to generate electricity.

Mississippi Power is an electric utility company and a subsidiary of Southern Company. The plant strated commercial combined cycle operations in August 2014 and is expected to be fully operational in the second quarter of 2015. Mississippi Power owns and operates the plant.

The IGCC plant uses Transport Integrated Gasification (TRIG) technology.

Background of Mississippi IGCC plant

Front-end engineering for the Kemper county energy project began in 2008, with site preparation and earthworks starting in 2010.

Sierra club, an environmental group, challenged the project in court in 2011. Mississippi Public Service Commission had certified the Kemper project in 2010. However, the project was further not affected by any legal issues, allowing Mississippi Power to move forward with construction.

Kemper County IGCC plant details

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The IGCC power project in Kemper County uses TRIG technology, which was developed by the Department of Energy, Southern Company and KBR at the Power Systems Development Facility in Wilsonville, Alabama.

The lignite fuel for the plant will be sourced from Liberty Mine in Mississippi, which has a four billion tonne reserve of lignite. The lignite will be transported from the mine to the plant site by trucks and conveyors. The plant will receive approximately 375,000t of lignite per month from the mine.

Natural gas will be routed to the site from the Tennessee Gas pipeline, which is present in the site boundary.

The lignite coal will be fed into the TRIG gasifier, where it is heated at a high temperature and under high pressure.

(Video) Kemper County Energy Facility | @ISSUE | MPB

The syngas produced in the gasification section will be used as fuel for the gas turbine. Steam produced by the syngas coolers in the gasification section will be used by the steam turbine in the combined cycle.

CO2 emitted from the Kemper County energy facility will be stored in the plant and sold to Denbury Resources for Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR). EOR is a process which involves the injection of CO2 into abandoned oil wells to force oil out of the ground.

The Kemper project will be a zero liquid discharge facility, and water used for electricity generation will not be pumped into rivers or streams.

Substations and grid connection for the Kemper county energy project

The Kemper county power project will include construction of five substations. Overhead transmission lines to a length of 60 miles (96.5km) are being laid to connect the plant with the grid network.

The combined cycle unit was synchronised to the grid in October 2013 and tested using natural gas as fuel for 11 months.

TRIG technology in the IGCC plant at Kemper County

"CO2 emissions will be 65% lower."

TRIG is a high-efficiency design that sends back coal that has not converted to gas in the initial stage for a second round of gasification. The result is a high-rate of lignite-to-gas conversion at a lower temperature and lower cost.

TRIG technology improves the power output and is more economical when compared to other gasification technologies. It also emits lesser sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon dioxide and mercury. CO2 emissions will also be 65% lower.

Construction of the Kemper project

As of January 2013, 75% of the plant’s construction was completed. Pressure testing of both gasifiers was completed by June 2014, while the combined cycle unit testing was completed in July.

The plant will generate 12,000 direct and indirect jobs during the construction phase and more than 1,000 upon operations beginning.

Funding for the Kemper county power project

Mississippi Power estimated the initial investment to be $2.4bn for the Kemper project. However, the project cost was revised to $3.42bn in April 2013.

The project received $270m in funding under the US Department of Energy’s Clean Coal Power Initiative. It also received $412m in investment tax credits from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

(Video) Gov. Barbour welcomes clean coal plant to Kemper County

Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) Power Plant, Mississippi (6)

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Topics in this article:

FAQs

What is an integrated gasification combined cycle power plant? ›

An integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC) is a technology using a high pressure gasifier to turn coal and other carbon based fuels into pressurized gas—synthesis gas (syngas). It can then remove impurities from the syngas prior to the electricity generation cycle.

What is the primary advantage of the IGCC integrated gasification combined cycle approach to coal generated electricity? ›

Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) technology can reach a higher efficiency rate than typical coal combustion technologies, such as sub-, super- and even ultra-supercritical combustion.

What is IGCC system? ›

Integrated coal gasification combined cycle (IGCC) power plants are a next-generation thermal power system with significantly enhanced power generation efficiency

power generation efficiency
The efficiency of a plant is the percentage of the total energy content of a power plant's fuel that is converted into electricity. The remaining energy is usually lost to the environment as heat unless it is used for district heating.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Power_plant_efficiency
and environmental performance due to its combination with coal gasification and the Gas Turbine Combined Cycle (GTCC) system.

What does IGCC stand for? ›

The abbreviation "IGCC" stands for "integrated coal gasification combined cycle." Conventional coal-fired thermal power stations burn coal and use the heat to produce steam. The steam powers the steam turbines, which then generate electricity.

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