Backup Power for Manufacturing Facilities

Backup Power for Manufacturing Facilities

Matching supply with demand.

When your lines aren't moving, you're not making money. You need power that will keep you in production and keep you efficient. Cat® standby generators run with low owning and operating costs so you can maximize profit by minimizing electrical expenses.

Find permanent or temporary power systems to keep up with your manufacturing or planned outage schedule. Our team will make installation and preventive maintenance easy — giving you the power to improve how you work.

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Guangzhou Brewery Guangzhou Brewery

Cat® G3412C CHP System Powers Connecticut Manufacturer PEPCO

Cat® dealer, H.O. Penn, partners with their customer, Plainville Electrical Products Company, to save on utility costs while developing new control systems in Bristol, Connecticut.




Reduced Operating Costs with High Efficiency CHP, Distributed Generation, or Standby Power

Many industrial facilities such as manufacturing plants, refineries, and regional district heating plants reduce operating costs by implementing a Cat combined heat and power (CHP) system (also known as cogeneration) using clean pipeline natural gas as a fuel source. Cat® gas generators can simultaneously provide electricity for electrical loads and heat energy for a facility's thermal requirements. Whereas separate grid electricity and natural gas boilers often provide less than 50 percent efficiency, Cat CHP projects offer:

  • Energy efficiency up to 90 percent
  • Reduced energy costs versus separate heat and electrical generation systems
  • Reduced emissions versus separate heat and electrical generation systems

Where the capture and use of waste heat is not viable, many industrial facilities may still benefit financially via distributed generation (DG), locally producing power to meet one's own requirements, or with a standby power plant. This is especially true when any of the following apply:

  • The local electric grid is unreliable
  • Natural gas is an inexpensive alternative to grid electricity
  • Generators can be applied during peak times of day to avoid high electrical utility demand charges (also known as peak shaving)

Lafayette Lafayette

How It Works

Any Cat natural gas fueled engine can be configured specifically for applications involving heat recovery. The engine drives a Cat gas generator to produce electricity, while jacket water and/or exhaust cooling circuits are fed through heat exchangers (radiators in the case where CHP is not employed) to transfer the waste heat from the engine to your hot water or steam circuit. That hot water or steam can then be effectively used for the purposes of a facility's process or HVAC requirements, including facility cooling (known as trigeneration) when implementing an absorption or adsorption chiller.

Caterpillar provides customized CHP package proposals, including the required mechanical equipment and controls to capture and transfer the engine thermal energy to an industrial facility. In addition, Caterpillar offers exhaust emissions aftertreatment for highly regulated emission environments and utility grade Cat paralleling switchgear to sell excess electricity generated to the local electric grid.

The total energy cost savings can more than offset total owning and operating costs, delivering a payback in as little as two to three years, depending on local energy pricing and policies.

How Distributed Generation and Standby Power Work

When power is produced locally without heat recovery from the engine, Caterpillar provides radiators for proper cooling to the engine jacket water, engine oil, and aftercooler water circuits. Cat paralleling switchgear is employed to allow generators to operate with one another or in conjunction with a local utility power source.

Although diesel fueled emergency power systems will always be the solution of choice for life safety emergency standby systems, there has been an increasing move toward natural gas fueled standby power systems in recent years. Typically installed with an automatic transfer switch (ATS) or paralleling switchgear control for multiple generators, these systems sense when a utility outage occurs and automatically start the backup power system and transfer power to the emergency source. When normal grid power returns, the control system automatically switches back and shuts down the emergency generator.

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