Hawaiian Electric’s Waiau Repower Project Selected
December 11 2023 - 2:00PM
Business Wire
Efficient new technology will replace units
built between 1947 and 1968
Hawaiian Electric Company, Inc. (“Hawaiian Electric”), a
subsidiary of Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. (NYSE: HE)
(“HEI”), announced today that its proposal to replace six aging
fossil-fuel generators at its Waiau Power Plant in Pearl City with
more efficient, fuel-flexible units has been selected to advance to
the next stage of an energy procurement process overseen by the
Public Utilities Commission (PUC).
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Rendering of proposed Waiau Repower
project, subject to change, when all six new units are in service.
Image courtesy of Hawaiian Electric.
The 253-megawatt project was one of several selected as part of
a competitive procurement process for firm renewable generation on
Oʻahu. This firm renewable generation resource will be available
24/7, is flexible to meet the needs of a modern grid using solar
and wind and can run on renewable biofuels. The proposed repowering
of the Waiau facility will be the largest generation project in
Hawaiian Electric’s 132-year history.
“Our obligation is to reliably serve Oʻahu customers for the
coming decades while also transitioning to cleaner renewable fuels
and this is a unique, cost-effective opportunity to upgrade
existing infrastructure with minimal impact to the community,” said
Michael DeCaprio, Hawaiian Electric’s vice president of power
supply.
The project still requires final approval by the PUC. Details on
the price of the project and estimated cost to customers will be
made available when the company files its application for approval.
Because maintenance and repair costs for the older units will be
eliminated, and because the new units are more efficient and will
run less frequently, significant savings are expected over 30 years
compared to the cost of continuing to run and repair the aging
units.
The six new units are combustion turbines or CTs, which are
similar to jet engines that turn turbines at high speeds to
generate electricity. They are intended to support generation
resources, including variable renewable energy like wind, solar and
battery storage, when they are unavailable or unable to meet system
demand. At approximately 42 megawatts, each CT unit is smaller and
more efficient than the oil-fired steam boiler it will replace, and
each can respond quickly to fluctuations on the electric grid.
Initially, the CTs will use biodiesel and can potentially use
renewable gas or hydrogen when it becomes commercially
available.
Waiau Units 3 and 4, aged 76 and 73 years respectively and
scheduled to be retired in 2024, will be the first units to be
replaced with the new technology over the next several years with
an expected in-service date of 2029.
The other four units, which came into service between 1959 and
1968, will be replaced in phases with all units expected to be
online by 2033.
To learn more, visit hawaiianelectric.com/waiaurepower.
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