You'll need about 75 gallons per megawatt of diesel or equivelent. 
You'll notice the cost is about 500/kilowatt from the China diesel to 
large systems: HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 15, 2001--The following 
is an advisory by Industrialinfo.com (Industrial Information 
Resources, Inc.; Houston, Texas). The Dow Chemical Company, BP and 
Occidental Chemical Company all have something new in common. These 
companies, along with a growing list of their peers, are increasingly 
turning to combined heat and power (CHP) generation, more commonly 
known as cogeneration, as a solution for their electricity and 
process steam needs. The co-production of electricity and steam are 
not new ideas, but their popularity in the U.S. is growing. Recent 
estimates have chemical companies responsible for nearly 1/3 or 
17,000 mega-watts (MW) of all electricity generated through 
cogeneration in the US. 

Aided by legislation passed in 1978 allowing the sale of excess 
electricity to local grids and more recent deregulation, projects of 
all sizes are being planned and built across the country. Many 
factors have contributed to make cogeneration more attractive to 
chemical companies and chief among them are favorable economics and 
environmental efficiency. Even the smaller chemical companies are 
building cogeneration units, thanks to recent technological 
breakthroughs. 

Dow Chemical and American Electric Power have teamed up to build a 
$325 million 900MW cogeneration at Dow's site in Plaquemine, 
Louisiana, scheduled to start construction in the fourth quarter of 
2001 and be completed in 2003. BP and Cinergy Solutions broke ground 
late last month on a 570MW plant for BP's Texas City, Texas refinery 
and chemical complex. The $275 million plant is expected to come 
online in 2004. Occidental Chemical Corporation is reviewing plans 
for an 80MW plant for one of its Gulf Coast sites with approval of 
for the $40 million project expected in June of 2002. 

``Traditional power producers were less than thrilled with the 
increasing trend towards cogeneration, as they were not only losing 
part of their customer base, but were also seeing those customers 
emerge as rivals on the open market,'' according to Annette Kreuger, 
Chemical Industry Specialist with Industrialinfo.com. ``To offset the 
losses, those same traditional energy producers are now bending over 
backwards to put together attractive design and construction packages 
for the chemical companies. In some cases, they are entering into 
partnerships with the companies to share costs and profits. In these 
days of deregulation, there are a host of ways to set up these new 
cogen units, but the bottom line is that chemical producers want more 
control of how their energy dollars are spent.'' 
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/011015/150035_1.html

And Capstone has priced their turbine at $400/kilowatt, will that 
burn about anything, eh?




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