| Tour of the Pleasant
Prairie Power Plant by Wendy Landwehr
Member, Chicago Regional Section
SWE held a joint meeting with American Concrete
Institute (ACI) and American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) on Thursday,
November 13. This meeting included a very interesting tour of the Pleasant
Prairie Power Plant (P4), located near Kenosha, WI. This is a very modern
coal burning power plant built in the early 80’s owned by We Energies.
Two Wisconsin Section members, Bryna Goeckner and Kay
Starkey, and one Chicago Regional Section member, the author, and her
husband attended this meeting with about 80 ACI and ASCE members. Bryna
happens to work at P4. First we were shown a short overview video that
previewed things we saw on the tour. We were given hard hats, protective
eyewear and earplugs to wear and boarded buses to view the power plant from
the outside. We saw the Coal Car dumper, Coal storage area, Conveyers, Ash
Reburn Silo and concrete roads made with a fly ash additive. Then we took
the walking tour of the interior of the plant where we saw pulverized coal
on conveyers, two boilers which create high pressure steam that is directed
to two turbines. The turbines drive the two electric generators. While we
were eating our supper two speakers (one of them Bryna) talked about the fly
ash and how it is being recycled and used as an additive for concrete.
Some of the cool things we learned are:
- This plant is
Wisconsin’s largest coal fired power plant producing 1,210,000 kilowatts
of electricity, which is 15 percent of the states electricity. It is rated
among the lowest cost producers of electricity in the nation.
- The plant
receives 8 trainloads of low sulfur coal a week containing 100 cars each
- We Energies
owns the cars and pays to have them transported back and forth to
Gillette, Wyoming. The cars are made of aluminum which allows more coal
to be put in each car and lowers the transportation cost from the older
steel cars.
- Pulverized coal
is dropped into the furnace and ignites in mid air. Because the coal is
pulverized, most of it burns and a small amount of waste produced. The
waste is called fly and bottom ash.
- All of the ash
is recycled and sold for use as an additive for concrete, or for use as a
construction fill or roadbed base.
- An ash recovery
program has been implemented. Ash from years ago is reclaimed from
landfills in the area. It is then pulverized and reburned with the coal.
Altogether this was a very worthwhile and interesting
event. |