Electrical Uses
Electrical Uses
Electrical Uses
Natural gas, because of its clean burning nature, has become a very popular
fuel for the generation of electricity. In the 1970s and 1980s, the choices for
most electric utility generators were large coal or nuclear powered
plants. However, due to economic, environmental and technological changes,
natural gas has become the fuel of choice for new power plants built since the
1990s. In fact, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that
between 2009-2015, 96.65 gigawatts (GW) of new electricity capacity will be
added in the U.S. Of this, over 20 percent, or 21.2 GW, will be natural gas
additions. The graph below shows how, according to the EIA, natural gas-fired
electricity generation is expected to account for 80 percent of all added
electricity generation capacity by
2035.
There are many reasons for this
increased reliance on natural gas
to generate our electricity. While
coal is the cheapest fossil fuel for
generating electricity, it is also the
dirtiest, releasing the highest
levels of pollutants into the air.
The electric generation industry, in
fact, has traditionally been one of
the most polluting industries in the
United States. Regulations
surrounding the emissions of
power plants have forced these
electric generators to come up
Source: EIA Annual Energy Outlook 2010
with new methods of generating
power, while lessening environmental damage. New technology has allowed
natural gas to play an increasingly important role in the clean generation of
electricity. Click on the link for more information on the environmental
benefits of natural gas, including its role as a clean energy source for the
generation of electricity.
Steam Generation Units
Natural gas can be used to generate electricity in a variety of ways. The most
basic natural gas-fired electric generation consists of a steam generation unit,
where fossil fuels are burned in a boiler to heat water and produce steam that
then turns a turbine to generate electricity. Natural gas may be used for this
process, although these basic steam units are more typical of large coal or
nuclear generation facilities. These basic steam generation units have fairly
low energy efficiency. Typically, only 33 to 35 percent of the thermal energy
used to generate the steam is converted into electrical energy in these types
of units.
Centralized Gas Turbines
Gas turbines and combustion engines are also used to
generate electricity. In these types of units, instead of
heating steam to turn a turbine, hot gases from burning
fossil fuels (particularly natural gas) are used to turn the
turbine and generate electricity. Gas turbine and
combustion engine plants are traditionally used primarily
for peak-load demands, as it is possible to quickly and
easily turn them on. These plants have increased in
popularity due to advances in technology and the
availability of natural gas. However, they are still
traditionally slightly less efficient than large steam-driven
power plants.
A Centralized Gas
Turbine
Generation
Station
Source: National Energy
Technology Laboratory, DOE