PowerPointPrsentation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

PowerPointPrsentation

Description:

PowerPointPrsentation – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:56
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: stephant
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: PowerPointPrsentation


1
Pumped Storage New Hydro Columbia Gorge
Aluminum Energy Park Douglas C. MacCourt Ater
Wynne LLP
Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians Tribal
Energy Conference Energy Fair March 16-18,
2008 Portland, Oregon
2
Region Columbia River Klickitat County
3
Columbia River Region in Transition
  • Key trade link to Asia
  • Regional transportation hub
  • Changing economies, changing uses, changing views

4
Industry at the Crossroads
5
Columbia Gorge Aluminum
  • NSC Smelter LLC, dba Columbia Gorge Aluminum
    (CGA) owns an idle aluminum smelter in
    Goldendale, WA (located 120 miles east of
    Portland, OR)
  • Plant is situated alongside the John Jay Dam on
    the Columbia River with rail, highway, river
    access
  • Following acquisition through bankruptcy,
    significant investment to upgrade plant
    facilities undertaken to restart plant

6
Site Features
  • Smelter site over 600 acres developed industrial
    land for plant, power and water systems
  • 7,000 acres of undeveloped land adjacent to the
    Columbia River
  • Approximately 1,000 acres is a low land bench
    situated along-side the Columbia River at an
    elevation of approximately 600 ft msl.
  • Approximately 6,000 acres at the top of downward
    sloping escarpment at an elevation of 2,500 ft
    msl.

7
(No Transcript)
8
Industrial Setting Power, Access, Space
9
Smelting Operations
  • At full operation
  • 168,000 metric tons per year primary aluminum
  • Over 700 full and part time employees
  • Daily power consumption 328 Mw

10
Global Aluminum US Falls, World Grows
  • Primary cause of decline in US production is cost
    of power.
  • Up to 40 of cost to produce aluminum from
    bauxite ore is energy
  • Other factors technology, labor, regulatory

11
(No Transcript)
12
Redevelopment Clean Energy
  • Land above smelter leased to wind farm that will
    operate 29 turbines between 2008 and 2009, part
    of a much larger wind development adjacent to CGA
    lands in Klickitat County
  • Offers for reuse of smelter site for solar and
    wind energy component manufacture
  • Pumped storage opportunity using land between
    wind turbine sites and adjacent to smelter

13
Proximity to Energy Infrastructure
14
Excellent Wind Energy Potential
15
(No Transcript)
16
Wind Projects Underway
17
Potential Upper Lower Reservoir Sites
Initial estimates are for a 1050MW plant
18
View with Plant Site Proximity
19
Potential Upper Reservoir Location
20
First Steps to Redevelopment Recycle
  • A massive recycling project
  • Each pot produces
  • 45 tons of steel
  • 7 tons of aluminum
  • 2.5 tons of recyclable electrolyte (bath)
    material
  • Waste
  • 80 tons of spent pot liner

21
Steel
22
Aluminum
23
Pot Line Recycling Key to Reuse
  • Removal of pots and lines from buildings will
    create usable manufacturing space in existing
    structures
  • Sales of scrap will fund waste disposal costs
    (over 4 million in disposal costs alone)
  • Scrap sales will also help fund feasibility
    studies for pumped storage project and
    preparation of buildings for reuse

24
Regulatory Issues
  • Good coordination between Washington Department
    of Ecology (DOE) and US EPA Region 10
  • Bob King and Paul Skillingstad of DOE
  • Waste programs coordinating so timing of
    generation of waste and timing of recycling
    efforts match
  • Good models from other aluminum smelter reuse
    projects in Washington

25
Project Coordination
  • Other site cleanup and management issues continue
    without impact to, or from, recycling project
  • Coordination with Klickitat County, Klickitat
    Public Utility District, Bonneville Power
    Administration for energy development
  • Klickitat County Economic Development and PUD key
    to growth of clean energy industry at site and
    throughout region

26
Conclusion
  • State and federal agency coordination key for
    regulatory issues
  • Building on existing relationships between
    environmental management at plant and DOE
    Industrial Program
  • Recycling effort key to funding reuse efforts
  • Staging project essential for maximum economic
    value and control over project operations on the
    ground
  • Local agency and community relations key to new
    uses and clean energy opportunities

27
A New Life for Old Industry
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com