www.inl.gov Next Generation Nuclear Plant Business Models for Industrial Process Heat Applications Dr. Michael G. McKellar [email protected]01 208 526-1346 Technical and Economic Assessment of Non-Electric Applications of Nuclear, NEA/IAEA Expert Workshop Paris, France, April 6, 2013
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Next Generation Nuclear Plant Business Models for Industrial Process Heat Applications Dr. Michael G. McKellar [email protected] 01 208 526-1346
Technical and Economic Assessment of Non-Electric
Applications of Nuclear,
NEA/IAEA Expert Workshop
Paris, France, April 6, 2013
Outline
• Objectives
• Advantages of HTGR Process Heat
• HTGR Characteristics and Economics
• Economic Model & Assumptions
• Examples • Power Generation
• Gas to Liquid via Methanol
• Steam Assisted Gravity Drainage (Oil Sands)
• Conclusions
1
Objectives
• The Next Generation Nuclear Plant (NGNP) Project, led by Idaho National Laboratory, is part of a nationwide effort under the direction of the U.S. Department of Energy to address a national strategic need identified in the Energy Policy Act of 2005—to promote the use of nuclear energy and establish a technology for hydrogen and electricity production that is free of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
• This presentation is a summary of analyses performed by the NGNP project to determine whether it is technically and economically feasible to integrate high temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTGR) technology into industrial processes.
2
Advantages of HTGR High-Temperature Process Heat
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• Reducing CO2 emissions by replacing the heat derived from burning fossil fuels, as practiced by a wide range of chemical and petrochemical processes, and co-generating electricity, steam, and hydrogen.
• Generating electricity at higher efficiencies than are possible with current nuclear power generation technology
• Providing a secure long-term domestic energy supply and reducing reliance on offshore energy sources
• Producing synthetic transportation fuels with lower life cycle, well-to-wheel (WTW) greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions than fuels derived from conventional synthetic fuel production processes and similar or lower WTW GHG emissions than fuels refined from crude oil
Advantages of HTGR High-Temperature Process Heat
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• Producing energy at a stable long-term cost that is relatively unaffected by volatile fossil fuel prices and a potential carbon tax, a price set on GHG emissions
• Extending the availability of natural resources for uses other than a source of heat, such as a petrochemical feedstock
• Providing benefits to the national economy such as more near-term jobs to build multiple plants, more long-term jobs to operate the plants, and a reinvigorated heavy manufacturing sector.
HTGR Integration Characteristics
• Plant Rating – 2,400 MWt to 6,000 MWt
• Modular Nuclear Heat Supply System Modules – 350 MWt to 625 MWt
– Provides flexibility in meeting needs of electric grid and industrial process
energy needs and deployment schedule
• Connection to Regional Grid
• Benign Safety Basis to permit collocation with industrial facility or
population centers
– Provides flexibility in siting to maximize applicability
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HTGR Economics Development Approach
• What forms of energy can the HTGR supply
• What does the market need − Identify specific process applications & their characteristics
• Develop integrated plant designs using the HTGR, where appropriate, to supply required energy
• Establish the costs of the integrated plant including the process and the HTGR
• Determine economics & establish the competitiveness of the HTGR integration with the market
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Up to 850°C
High Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors – Application Beyond Electricity
High Temperature Reactors can provide energy production that supports wide spectrum
of industrial applications including the petrochemical and petroleum industries
Reactor Temperature Range Covering Applications Evaluated To-date
The Potential Market (INL/EXT-10-19037, R1, August 2011*)
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Existing Plants – Assuming 50% Penetration of Likely Combined Heat & Power Market -- 2.2 quads*
The Opportunity — Integrating Nuclear High Temperature Process Heat with Industrial Applications
Coal-to-Liquids (24 – 100,000 bpd plants )
Petrochemical (170 plants in U.S.)
Fertilizers/Ammonia (23 plants in U.S.–NH3 production)
Petroleum Refining (137 plants in U.S.)
Oil Sands/Shale60 - 56,000 bpd plants
* Quad = 1x1015 Btu (293 x 106 MWth) annual energy consumption
Hydrogen Production14 - 719 tpd plants
Growing and New Markets – Potential for 13.6 quads of HTGR Process Heat & Power & Electricity Generation
Electricity Generation40 GWe capacity
Co-generation Petrochemical, Refinery, Fertilizer/Ammonia plants and others
Synthetic Fuels & Feedstock Steam, electricity, high temperature fluids, hydrogen
249 GWt (415 – 600 MWt modules)
IPP Supply of Electricity
110 GWt (~180 – 600 MWt modules)
10% of the nuclear electrical supply increase required to achieve pending Government objectives for emissions reductions by 2050
* References can be retrieved from the NGNP web site - https://inlportal.inl.gov/vhtrinformation
HTGR Capital Costs
• 75% of Capital Cost Covered by 10 Components – Reactor Building
– Reactor Vessel
– Reactor Initial Core
– Reactor Metallic Internals
– Reactor Graphite Internals
– Reactor Cavity Cooling System
– Core Refueling Equipment
– Heat Rejection System
– Heat Transport System
– Power Conversion System
• Indirect Costs 46% of Direct Costs – Construction Services (20%)
– Home Office & Engineering Services (16%)
– Field Office & Engineering Services (10%)
• Owners Costs 12% of Direct Costs
• Contingency 20% of Direct + Indirect Costs
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Plant Capital Costs • Correlations Developed (INL TEV-
1196)
– Phase, Demo, FOAK, NOAK
– Module Rating
– Plant Rating, number of modules
– Operating Temperature
– Type of Heat Transport System
– Type and number of Power Conversion Systems
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Project Model
• General – HTGR plant a separate business entity from industrial plant(s)
– Long term energy supply arrangement/contract(s)
– Potential multiple industrial plants
– Potential electricity supply to the grid • Normal operations / supply of excess energy
• HTGR – Potentially owned or partially owned by Industrial plant owner
– Operated by an experienced nuclear plant operator
– Financing arrangements affect energy pricing / return
– Requires long term near full capacity contract / demand
• Industrial Plant Owner – Price supports return
– What is, if any, value of long term stability in price and security of supply?
– What is, if any, value of insulation from future governmental policies on carbon?
Project Model
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Interfacing HTGR & Process economic models are used to evaluate specific applications
HTGR Economic Model (INL/EXT-12-24143, Jan 2012)
• Prepared by INL and used for establishing the economic viability of integrating HTGR in industrial processes and for generation of electricity
• The industrial process and the HTGR plant are modeled; the project can be evaluated in two ways that either separates the economics of the process from that of the HTGR or integrates the process and HTGR economics as follows:
– The HTGR supplies energy to the process at a calculated price and the process economics are evaluated at that price, or
– The HTGR is fully integrated into the process and the economics are evaluated by comparing the calculated product pricing with the market
• Structure, methods, financial modeling factors recommended by and results reviewed by:
– NGNP Industry Alliance, Ltd. Senior Advisor Group
– Entergy
– Technology Insights
– Several potential end users including petro-chemical companies, oil sands producers, ammonia producers
– Personnel associated with the structuring of financing packages for nuclear power plants and SMRs
– Personnel from the U.S. DOE loan guarantee office
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HTGR Economic Model Methodology
• Discounted cash flow analysis from project initiation through decommissioning of the plant. – Costs*
• Design, licensing, construction and commissioning of the modules using a phased approach with varying construction and startup times
• Debt and interest on debt during construction
• Operating costs including debt payments, continuing capital expenditures & outage costs including refueling
• Tax and decommissioning costs, including escrow of D&D costs
– Capacity factor considers module construction & commissioning phasing, refueling, planned outages and un-planned outages
– Revenues* from sale of the commodities based on plant capacity factor
• Calculation returns: – Internal Rate of Return on Equity, Net Present Value, Net Income and
simple pay back period
*Inflation and escalation factors can be applied to each cost and revenue element
Assumptions: Economic Analyses
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• Plant economic life: 30 years (excludes construction time)
• Construction period – Fossil plant: Three years
– HTGR plant: Three years per reactor with 6 months stagger between reactor
• Start-up assumptions for “nth-of-a-kind” HTGR – Operating costs: 120% of estimated operating costs
– Revenues: 65% of estimated revenue
• Plant availability: 90%
• Internal rate of return (IRR): 12%
• Inflation rate: 3%
• Interest rate on debt: 8%
• Repayment term: 15 years
• Reactor capital cost assumptions for HTGR modules: – $2,000/kW(t) for plants with one or two modules
– $1,400/kW(t) for plants with three or more modules
Assumptions: Economic Analyses
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• Tax basis assumptions – Effective U.S.
income tax rate: 38.9%
– U.S. state tax: 6%
– U.S. federal tax: 35%
• MACRS depreciation: 15-year plant life
• Simplified business model in which a single entity owns and operates the industrial and associated HTGR plants
Economics of Application – Comparison with Natural Gas
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Note: A $10/MT tax on CO2 emissions is equivalent to an increase of $0.50/MMBtu
natural gas price.
Electricity Generation
• High Temperatures provide several options for power conversion systems (INL-TEV-988)
– Subcritical, Super-Critical and Super-Super-Critical Rankine
– Direct and Indirect Brayton
– Brayton Combined Cycle
– One and Two-Stage Super-Critical CO2 Combined Cycle
• Net Efficiencies up to ~ 49% are Projected
• Example – Subcritical Rankine – 4-600 MWt Modules
HES Example: Nuclear Hybrid System to Offset Fluctuations in Wind or Solar Power
Steam turbine
generators
Methanol
synthesis
Steam
generation
Nuclear energy
Methane
reforming steam
Natural gas
Reliable base or
intermediate power
Synfuel carbon
fuel
power heat
Wind energy
Hybrid Energy Systems Integrate
• Energy sources
• Industrial Processes
Via
• Storage
• Power Production
• Process Heat
• Instrumentation and Control
Conclusions
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• Integration of HTGRs to Process Heat Applications is economically feasible for some applications (CTL, SAGD)
• On a cost per power basis, larger reactor units are more economical than small units
• On a cost per power basis, reactor clusters (2 or more units) are more economical than a single unit
• Higher reactor temperatures allow for higher power production and potential cost savings
• The cost of the reactor has the biggest impact on capital cost.
• The price of the product is not significantly changed whether the heat application and HTGR are owned by a single entity or if owned by separate entities.
• Carbon taxes economically promotes HTGR-integrated process heat applications
• Hybrid Energy Systems provides a means to effectively integrate renewable energy, nuclear energy, and process heat applications through storage, process heat, power production, instrumentation and control.