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Power-GEN Middle East
Middle East Energy Efficiency
Current Overview & GE Solutions
Mohamed Bennoudi, Market Research & Competitive
Intelligence Leader
Abu Dhabi, UAE | 12-14, October 2014
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
GE Power & Water
© 2014, General Elect ric Company.
GE Proprietary Information - The information contained in this document is
General Electric Company (GE) proprietary information. It is the property of GE
and shall not be used, disclosed to others or reproduced without the express
written consent of GE, including, but without limitation, in the creation,
manufacture, development , or derivation of any repairs, modifications, spare
parts, or configuration changes or to obtain government or regulatory approval
to do so, if consent is given for reproduction in whole or in part , this notice and
the notice set forth on each page of this document shall appear in any such
reproduction in whole or in part . The information contained in this document may
also be controlled by the US export control laws. Unauthorized export or reexport is prohibited.
All relative statements are with respect to GE technology unless otherwise noted.
2
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
Energy landscape
Middle East Energy Consumpt ion
Primar y Energy Int ensit y
Oil
Products,
48.4%
Toe per 1000
Coal , 0.2%
Natural
Gas,
50.5%
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
2000
2010
Hydro
Electricity ,
0.9%
Source: Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (AOPEC), 2012
Source: US Energy Information Administration (EIA)
Energy Consumpt ion vs. Economic Growt h
200
180
%
160
Primary Energy Consumption
Electricity Consumption
GDP Growth
index 2000 = 100%
140
120
100
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Key Highlight s
• Accelerated growth in energy consumption
faster than GDP growth leading to a low
effectiveness in energy use
• More than double the amount of energy is
required to produce one unit of GDP than
Europe partially due to the economy
diversification strategy into energy
intensive industries
Source: World Bank
3
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
Solution
4
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
Energy efficiency
Energy Efficiency Savings In IEA11*
Cost of energy Efficiency Barrels Saved
Hypothetical energy use
without energy efficiency
improvements
Savings
• Energy Efficiency is preferred as it can be implemented on both supply and demand
sides
• The experience of the Organization of Economic Co-operation & Development
(OECD) countries in energy efficiency initiative enabling a 58% of energy savings
over a period of three decades
• Energy efficiency if applied in a smart manner is cost effective solution such as
the case of Poland
Source: International Energy Agency (IEA), 2011
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
5
GE installed base in Middle East
With the availability of fuels that are more economically viable and with the
growing interest in turning to non-traditional fuels, gas turbines have
higher efficiency potential than boilers and reciprocating engines. Within
GE gas turbine portfolio, Class B and E can handle the majority of fuel types
Steam
22.94%
Risidual Oil
0.26%
LNG
0.09%
Natural Gas
51.00%
Distillate
16.45%
Crude Oil
9.26%
Over 1,100 of GE gas & steam
turbines installed in the Middle
East utilizing diverse fuel types
spanning from natural gas to oil
6
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
GE Proposed Solution
7
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
H-class Gas
Turbine Evolut ion
Operational
Flexibility & Proven
Experience
~61 efficiency
Advanced Gas
Pat h
Integrated system
solution; no impact
on quoted base load
emissions
Output *:
3.5% <SC < 4.5 %
Heat Rate*:
-2.1%<SC<-0.9%
Per formance
Improvement
Package
7EA & 6B
Prevent leakage of
compressor
discharge w/ better
sealing features &
reducing surface gap
available between
shroud & bucket
Output:
2.0% <SC < 5.0 %
-2.7%<SC<-0.7%
Flange t o Flange
Full replacement of
GT core engine
New rotor, casings,
compressor blades,
vanes, combustion
system & turbine
section,
Extend asset/plant
life while recapturing
lost performance
with output increase
& fuel flexibility
8
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
LifeMax
DLN 2.6+
9E Max
Combination of both
hardware & software
solutions specifically
developed for B/E class
technology
GE Predictivity solution relies
heavily on intelligent
machines comprising of big
data and analytics to
optimize customers’ asset
Designed to expand
operational flexibility to meet
power demand needs while
reducing operational costs
Available for F class
DLN 2.6+ technology
broaden operational with six
fuel nozzles allowing
asymmetric fuel delivering
flexibility to burn multiple
fuels
New 4-stage turbine module
designed as a drop-in turbine
module replacement for the
existing 9E installed fleet .
Includes new casings, turbine
rotor, HGP components &an
advanced exhaust diffuser
Efficiency : +2 to 3 pts
Output: + 10% to 12%
9
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.
GE Works: Powering the ME region
1,000
10,000
3
• Number of GE gas turbines
powering the Middle East
• MMBTU/hr of fuel can be
saved
• Billion USD forecast fuel
savings on GE units over 10
years
Energy Efficiency: efficient use of nat ural resources
10
© 2014, General Electric Company. Proprietary information. All rights reserved.