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Old-School Heating The savings continue to climb from a biomass boiler installed at Nova Scotia Agricultural College |
| Written by Heather Hager | |
There’s no smell of smoke, only a light pine scent from the new wood chips being unloaded. But on this crisp, –14ºC morning, the boilers are hard at work warming the people and livestock at Nova Scotia Agricultural College (NSAC) in Truro, Nova Scotia.
NSAC was heated first with two coal-fired boilers, but they were converted to use no. 2 light fuel oil in 1968, says chief stationary engineer Kevin Craig, who has been with NSAC since 1992. The biomass boiler was installed in response to the late 1970s energy crisis, which kept crude oil prices high into the mid-1980s. “In 1988, the wood chip boiler was commissioned as a showcase for industry, hoping to open the doors for private industry to see it as a working model. And the university wanted the energy savings side of it too,” says Craig.
“I was told that, considering it’s supporting local jobs and local resources, even if we were in the red, it would have to be a fair amount in the red before we’d switch to oil,” says Craig. “Being a government institution, we’re trying to support local jobs and resources to a degree. Also, we’re not going to pack up just because of one year with no savings after many years with savings.” Oil prices have risen again in recent years, making the investment well worthwhile. It’s resulted in more than $400,000 savings in fuel costs in each of the last five years. Fibre Supply Fibre to feed the boiler is obtained through an open bidding process for one-year supply contracts. The main limitation in the process is the dearth of local suppliers in the area, with only one chipping company (North-Lumber-Land Resources) and one grinding company (Verboom Grinders), says Craig. The preferred fuel is chips because of their better flow consistency, but the contract was recently opened to ground biomass to increase competitiveness.
An inclined auger brings the fibre to the KMW furnace, which heats a 272-kW boiler manufactured by I. Matheson & Company of nearby New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. The boiler is rated for 12,000 pounds/hour of steam, but Craig says it’s capable of producing up to 15,000 pounds/hour. The system consumes 6500 to 8800 tonnes of fibre in an average heating season.
Because of that, Craig tries to buy top-quality fuel to minimize issues with ash removal and clinkers. Once a day, the boiler operator on duty rakes ash into chutes to an auger that takes the ash outdoors to an enclosed trailer. Fly ash, which precipitates out of the flue gas in a separator, also goes to the trailer. Ash disposal isn’t too much of a problem; it’s piled outdoors until spring, when it’s mixed with manure and spread on the university’s agricultural fields. Improving Efficiency A significant upgrade to the system involved installing variable-speed drives on the stoker auger and the fans that supply air to the furnace, regulating combustion. “Those [fans] were previously just dampers, and we’d be adjusting those dampers based on steam load and fuel, trying to regulate the burn that way. Now, it’s more automated. The variable-speed drives modulate the fans’ speed based on the steam pressure of the boiler,” explains Craig.
Craig has a few items on his wish list for future improvements. He thinks that a bigger storage space for stockpiling the biomass would allow the supplier to skip processing and delivery on wet and stormy days, resulting in drier fuel. Taking the pressure off the supplier for almost daily delivery could also help to moderate the price of fuel. Craig also thinks that an economizer would capture some of the excess heat from the flue gas, making the system even more efficient. Most of all, he’d like to add another biomass boiler to the fleet. “It seems every other year they’re building another building or expanding the size of buildings. But even when it [the biomass boiler] was installed in 1988, it wasn’t large enough to heat the university entirely.” That means the university is burning more oil each year as it grows in size. These days, the biomass boiler is supplemented by a 260-kW Cleaver Brooks boiler running on no. 2 oil and producing up to 12,000 pounds/hour of steam. On a cold winter day, the boiler house output can be 24,000 pounds/hour of steam, meaning that both boilers are running at maximum capacity. In summer, however, only the oil boiler runs.
From all appearances, the savings from burning biomass instead of oil would be well invested in making Craig’s wish for a second biomass boiler come true. |
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