£1 million energy saving for Corus December 1st 2007 A million pounds in annual energy savings is expected from an installation of ABB
drives at Corus Strip Products in Port Talbot, South Wales
As part of a plant-wide energy
saving programme,24 ABB
industrial drives, ranging
from 140 to 400kW,are being
installed to control pumps on the hot
strip and cold mills, plus three fans on
the coke ovens.The pumps recirculate
cooling water in the mills, while the
fans are used for dust extraction at
the coke ovens.The cost of the drives
about £1 million; the whole project
including pumps, cabling and so on is
around £2.5 million.
The project started in July 2006,
when Guy Simms, leader of the
energy optimisation team at the Port
Talbot site, started looking into the
possible energy savings.The order for
the drives was placed in December
and installation commenced during
the second quarter of this year.
"The pump and fan motors were
clearly oversized and running longer
hours than necessary,"he says."Much
of the equipment on the site was
installed during the sixties, seventies
and early eighties.At the time, it was
common practice to oversize the
equipment by as much as 50%, to
make sure it was sufficiently robust.
In many ways this was a successful
policy – after all, it has lasted all these
years. But with the ABB drives we are
now installing,we can fine-tune the
applications to a degree that just
wasn't possible in those days."
The applications have varying
demand but until now, the pumps
and fans have been running
continuously at full speed. Running
to demand will not only reduce
energy costs but also save water and
improve control, particularly of the
cold mill, which could potentially
result in better product quality.
Low voltage drives are used as
they have a smaller footprint
compared to medium voltage drives.
A transformer reduces the voltage
from the 3.3kV network on the site to
the 690V used by the drives.
ABB was the preferred choice by
the engineers, as there is already a
large amount of ABB equipment on
the site.The engineers were happy
with the performance of the existing
equipment and standardising on
equipment from one manufacturer
reduces training needs and makes
maintenance easier.
The Corus site at Port Talbot in
Wales is one of the biggest
steelmaking plants in the UK with an
annual output of 5 million tonnes.
Energy is Corus' second highest cost
after raw materials.The costs and
revenues of the business are fairly
fixed, so high productivity is crucial
to stay competitive.
"Using drives to improve energy
performance is not just a matter of
payback, it is also a modification with
low risk,"Simms says."We can't afford
production stoppages. If a drive
solution doesn't work out, the worst
that can happen is that we have to
turn up the speed to 100% again.An
alternative approach could be to
install a new and smaller pump, but
then we would also need new pipes
and a new bedplate.Once built,we
would be stuck with this solution.
"We prefer to just add drives to
existing applications that have proven
their reliability over the years."
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