Dominion Begins Operation Of Renewable Energy Facility

Dominion fuel cell plant
West End fuel cell plant. Image from Dominion website

News release from Dominion:

Dominion announced today it has begun commercial operations at its Dominion Bridgeport Fuel Cell facility located in Bridgeport, Conn., and the Dominion Somers Solar Center located in Somers, Conn. Together, the two facilities produce approximately 20 megawatts of clean energy for the people of Connecticut, enough power for approximately 20,000 homes.

“Dominion is pleased to be adding 20 megawatts of renewable energy in Connecticut to our existing 2,100 megawatts of carbon-free power from our Millstone Power Station,” said David A. Christian, Dominion Generation chief executive officer. “These stations are generating clean, reliable electricity for Connecticut.”

Dominion Bridgeport Fuel Cell, which is located in Bridgeport along Interstate 95 and the Northeast rail corridor, is producing 14.9 megawatts of clean energy using an electro-chemical process that efficiently converts natural gas into electricity.

Dominion Bridgeport Fuel Cell is part of Project 150, a program sponsored by the state and supported by the Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority (CEFIA) to increase renewable and clean energy projects in Connecticut by 150 megawatts. CEFIA is the nation’s first full-scale clean energy finance authority that leverages public and private funds to drive investment and scale up clean energy deployment in Connecticut.

FuelCell Energy Inc. will operate and maintain the facility under a services contract with Dominion. FCE is supplying five Direct FuelCell® stationary fuel cell power plants and an organic rankine turbine that will convert waste heat from the fuel cells into additional electricity.

Dominion will sell the output of the fuel cell power station and solar center to Connecticut Light & Power under fixed power purchase agreements.

www.dom.com/about/stations/fossil/dominion-bridgeport-fuel-cell.jsp

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3 comments

  1. On the plus side, it brings in taxes and creates an alternative, non-fossil fuel energy source. On the downside, it created about one job and it looks horrible and does nothing to create community or revitalization. The acres of vacant weed-strewn lots surrounding it look better.

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