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Minexpo 2021 New Date

New date for Minexpo 20201 is August 1-August 5 20201

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POWER AS SECURE AS FORT KNOX

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Cat® Cogeneration System Offers Energy Security for Fort Knox

 Location: Fort Knox, Kentucky, USA

Customer Business Issue: Produce reliable power while reducing energy consumption

Solution: Six Cat® G3520C gas generator setsTen Cat 3516 diesel generator setsCat ISO switchgear

Cat® Dealer: Whayne Power Systems

 

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Six (6) Cat® gas generator sets and 10 Cat diesel generator sets were installed on the 109 thousand acre base Ft. Knox. These units provide 44 Mw of peak load power that are used for backup power, combined heat and power, and peak shaving.

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In fall 2014, Fort Knox completed a $60 million energy project to supply power 24/7 to the base through a cogeneration system.

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With potential threats to energy growing in scope and complexity, the Army is focusing on projects that incorporate resilience, including microgrids and cogeneration systems.

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Cat® G3520C generator sets, fueled by natural gas reserves found underneath Fort Knox, provide prime and backup power to the U.S. Army base, which can now operate off the public grid in the event of an emergency.

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Cat service and support from local dealer Whayne Power Systems

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When the project was developed, the conclusion was that CHP was the most effective way to give Fort Knox both the energy security and energy savings that it needs.

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Cat G3520C natural gas-fueled generator

Fort Kox
Fort Knox
Fort Knox
Fort Kox
Fort Kox
Fort Knox
Fort Kox

 

POWER NEED

Energy and water are fundamental elements to the readiness and resilience of the U.S. Army.

The occurrence of a major power grid outage may be out of the Army’s control, but preparing for a disruption and the aftermath is not, according to J.E. “Jack” Surash, PE, Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army for Energy & Sustainability.

Potential threats to Army energy, water, and land resources are growing in scope and complexity at home and abroad. Army energy systems are vulnerable to cyber attacks, progressively sophisticated enemy weapons, and increasingly frequent and severe weather events.

“The future of Army energy must be focused on energy resilience and security because the ability to prepare for and recover rapidly from power disruptions is more critical to warfighting readiness than ever,” Surash said in an article published in District Energy magazine.

Given these potential threats, the Army is working to move beyond energy and water projects that just increase generation options or save money to projects that incorporate resilience – including microgrids and combined heat and power systems. The 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act requires a higher level of energy security at military installations.

Known primarily for its gold vault, Fort Knox is also home to the Army Human Resource Command Center and a high school – one of only three bases in the country to still have a school onsite. In May 2010, the Army Human Resource Center opened following the largest construction project in the history of Fort Knox. The $185 million, three-story, 880,000-square-foot complex of six interconnected buildings is the largest office building in the state, employing nearly 4,300 soldiers and civilians.

U.S. Rep. Brett Guthrie and other Kentucky congressmen were instrumental in getting legislation included in last year’s National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that assured Fort Knox’s continued focus on energy resilience.

“Our military must be ready to face any number of threats around the world,” Guthrie said. “The (2018) NDAA improves our military readiness and supports our troops. We ask our servicemen and women to put their lives on the line for us, and we must make sure they have the best care we can provide for them.

“It makes Fort Knox unique, and it makes it better for other missions and for opportunities for growth,” Guthrie said. “And it’s safety and security for our soldiers, which is first and foremost.”

SOLUTION

In fall 2014, Fort Knox completed a $60 million energy project that provides the sprawling base with 44 MW of peak-load power. Four of six gas-fired Cat G3520C generator sets supply power to the base 24/7 through a combined heat and power (CHP) system.

The installation also includes ten Cat 3516 diesel gensets that are used primarily for backup power. The gas and diesel units are housed in six separate power stations that comprise the microgrid at the 109,000-acre base, which is located 35 minutes south of Louisville, Ky.

When the project was developed, the conclusion was that CHP was the most effective way to give Fort Knox both the energy security and energy savings that it needs, said Tom Abele, a vice president for project developer Harshaw Trane.

“We were hired to provide energy security to the base, and the challenge was to do it in a way that paid for itself,” Abele said. “We ran multiple scenarios and considered various solutions to try to accomplish this. We looked at alternative fuels, biodiesel, waste-to-power, coal, and big turbines. Nothing made as much sense as CHP.”

Beyond providing energy security, the power system reduces the base’s energy costs by an estimated $5.5 to $6 million per year in energy savings.

About 2,000 facilities, including 1,500 homes, get their power from the Fort Knox grid. With the kind of reserves the base can tap into from heat, natural gas, and other forms of energy, Fort Knox can actually run independently for an indefinite amount of time during an emergency, said R.J. Drydek, energy manager for Fort Knox’s Directorate of Public Works. The current minimum, based on Army regulations, is 14 days.

“So that’s goal number one, and Fort Knox is achieving that as one of the best, if not the best, military bases in the world in terms of overall energy reduction,” Abele said.

Louisville-based Boyd Cat supplied the power generation side of the project, helping determine the right selection of cogeneration engines to meet the base’s power needs.

“This project was three years in the making and involved multiple facets, including supplying switchgear, gas and diesel generator sets, and other ancillary equipment,” said Steve Killian, an electric power gas and microgrid product sales representative who coordinated the Fort Knox installation for Boyd Power Systems. “Our role doesn’t end once the installation is complete – we continue to partner with (CHP system operator) Nolin RECC to ensure the generators continue to operate at peak efficiency.”

The selection of the Cat generator sets at Fort Knox was based on the fact that they were the right fit for the project, their reputation for durability, and also the close proximity to the resources of Boyd Power Systems in Louisville.

“Along the way, no matter how well you’ve prepared, there have been certain things that just couldn’t be forecast,” said Greg Lee, president and CEO of Nolin Rural Electric Cooperative Corp. (RECC), the utility privatization contractor at Fort Knox. “Fortunately for us, we’ve had the Boyd technicians and engineers who can resolve any issues we encounter or put us in touch with the right people at Caterpillar.”

RESULTS 

In the fall of 2018, Fort Knox engineers conducted an energy resilience test by cutting off grid power and operating the base on its own energy resources. Prior to this test, Fort Knox engineers had performed several smaller shutdown tests to the post’s individual substations.

At the request of Fort Knox, Nolin RECC shut down all of Fort Knox’s substations, disconnecting from Louisville Gas & Electric – the electric and natural gas provider for the region – and operated independently with its own energy resources, something no other Army installation has tried.

The plan was to shut off power at 10 a.m. on Oct. 24 and switch to decentralized power generated at Fort Knox within 10 minutes, Drydek said.

A hitch in the test occurred when the breaker to the power generation station for U.S. Army Human Resources Command wouldn’t close. Following a reset, the substation locked in and started powering up about 14 minutes into the test.

“The thing to keep in mind is that anything could happen, but we are reasonably prepared and have a contingency for just about anything we can think of,” Lee said. “We do test this in the middle of the night every six months.”

Surash said that while he hasn’t had the opportunity to get around to every installation working on energy resilience, he was very impressed with what Fort Knox accomplished.

“The capabilities at Fort Knox seem to be one of the best with respect to energy resiliency that I’m aware of,” Surash said. “I was happy to see that they actually tested that capability. It’s one thing to have a capability, but until you test it, you really don’t know what’s going to work and what’s not going to work.

“As it turns out, the system worked as designed.”

Download the Power Profile

 

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