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Hundreds of redundancies at MGT Power: Unite

  • Market: Biomass
  • 08/08/19

UK union Unite has questioned hundreds of "surprise" redundancies at MGT Power's 299MW dedicated biomass combined heat and power (CHP)plant, currently under construction in Teesside, northeast England.

"The job losses came as a major surprise as there is 18 months' worth of work left to complete on the project," Unite said. "The redundancies have led to fears that the entire site could be mothballed," the union added.

A total of 800 redundancies have been made in the past month "and further job losses are expected", Unite said. The site currently has a "skeleton workforce" of around 350 workers.

The UK government's Low Carbon Contracts Company's contracts for difference (CfD) register shows an expected generation start date of 31 March 2020 for MGT, from its latest update on 1 August. MGT was awarded a 15-year CfD subsidy with an inflation-linked strike price of £125/MWh in 2014.

There were several reported strikes at the construction site earlier this year, but MGT confirmed to Argus on 12 June that construction was back under way.

MGT is the world's largest newbuild dedicated biomass plant. It will consume 1mn t/yr of wood pellets when running at full capacity, all of which will be supplied by US wood pellet producer Enviva.

Construction is managed by Spanish engineering and construction company Tecnicas Reunidas and engineering firm Atlantic Projects Company.

Finnish utility Fortum has signed a 10-year contract to operate and maintain the CHP once construction is complete.

MGT Power has been contacted for comment.


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Tokyo, 22 November (Argus) — Japan's largest electricity producer Jera aims to resume coal and biomass co-firing at the 1.1GW Taketoyo plant in 2027's first quarter, after a fire halted plant operations in January. Jera announced on 22 November that the thermal power plant in central Japan's Aichi prefecture would resume co-firing wood pellets with coal at a rate of 8pc, around the end of the 2026-27 fiscal year ending in March. This will come after its safety measures are completed. The plant's co-firing rate was 17pc before the serious fire, which was caused by an explosion of dust from wood pellets. The company will consider increasing the co-firing rate again in the future, provided safety can be ensured. But the plant will restart coal-only combustion in early January 2025, operating mainly during the summer and winter seasons, when electricity demand is high. Jera will keep operation rates low at Taketoyo and other coal-fired plants when electricity demand is low and rely more on gas-fired generation, to achieve its initial plan to cut CO2 emissions through co-firing at Taketoyo. Taketoyo started co-firing operations in August 2022 and burned around 500,000 t/yr of wood pellets imported from the US and Vietnam. It will burn 200,000 t/yr after it resumes co-firing at 8pc. The plant will slow down the speed of wood pellet conveyors to reduce friction as a part of safety measures, which means it must also reduce its coal and biomass co-firing rate. It is also currently working on other safety measures, such as installing air pressure conveying facilities dedicated to wood pellets and explosion suppressor systems to inject fire extinguishing agents. The outage at Taketoyo has encouraged Jera to boost replacement gas-fired generation, with the extra gas-fired costs accounting for most of the estimated cost resulting from the shutdown, which could be tens of billion yen in the 2024-25 fiscal year ending in March. By Takeshi Maeda Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Japan’s Enshu Forest starts 7MW biomass power plant


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Japan’s Enshu Forest starts 7MW biomass power plant

Tokyo, 18 November (Argus) — Japan's Enshu Forest Energy started commercial operations at its 7.1MW biomass-fired power plant in Fukuroi city of Shizuoka prefecture on 16 November. The Enshu plant will burn 90,000t/yr of wood chips made from unused forest materials and gathered mainly from Shizuoka prefecture. It can generate around 53GWh/yr of electricity, which will be sold under the country's feed-in tariff (FiT) scheme for 20 years. The plant was initially scheduled to come on line in December, but started two weeks earlier as Enshu Forest Energy, the operating company, completed its safety check and test runs earlier than expected. Enshu Forest Energy is a joint venture between renewable power developer Forest Energy, Shizuoka Gas and Power and Japanese utility Chubu Electric Power, with each holding 70pc, 25pc and 5pc shares, respectively. Shizuoka Gasa and Power is a subsidiary of gas provider Shizuoka Gas. Forest Energy runs several biomass generation projects, including the 480kW Tsuwano plant in Shimane prefecture and the 1.8MW Shingu plant in Wakayama prefecture, mainly burning wood chips that are secured domestically. By Takeshi Maeda Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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15/11/24

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Review delays Brazil's LPG assistance program


11/11/24
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11/11/24

Review delays Brazil's LPG assistance program

Sao Paulo, 11 November (Argus) — Brazil's lower house has removed a proposed LPG assistance program from its urgent voting schedule, submitting it to further review and revisions. The program announced in August is still under deliberation, but officials now expect further revisions before it moves forward and launches on 1 January. The bill may add new controls to avoid fraud, the mines and energy ministry's petroleum, natural gas and biofuels secretary Pietro Mendes said last week during a debate in the lower house about LPG. Congressman Hugo Leal, the bill's overseer, told Argus that he will propose creating LPG cylinders smaller than the typical household 13kg models to ease access for low-income families. Low-income families spend 70pc of their resources on housing and groceries, according to Carlos Ragazzo, a researcher at the Getulio Vargas Foundation. That suggests that the current government financial support has likely been used for monthly expenses rather than substituting firewood usage for cooking with LPG. Consumption of firewood for cooking fell from 2005-2015 (see chart) , thanks to improved economic conditions throughout the country, according to energy research firm EPE. But the share of households that use firewood for cooking has hovered around 25pc since 2015, even after the launch of program to promote LPG cooking use in 2021 to help those families during the Covid-19 pandemic. Leal met with lower house leader Arthur Lira on 5 November to discuss the program's proposals and voting agenda, but no details have emerged since. Almost 1mn Brazilian households cook with biomass only. That represents 1.1pc of the 12.7mn households that use biomass for any energy need. Additionally, 56pc of the biomass-only households are low-income families. A 13kg LPG cylinder in Brazil costs R106.63 ($18.49), on average. That represents 7pc of Brazil's minimum wage. Low-income families usually receive only half of the minimum wage, on average. By Betina Moura Brazil residential energy sources Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Talks to restart as port of Vancouver lockout drags


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