Tuesday, May 8, 2012

British Sky Broadcasting, Heathrow Airport Embrace Renewable Energy

Turboden recently entered the UK market with awards for two biomass-fueled Combined Cooling, Heat and Power plants for two of the country’s most well known institutions - British Sky Broadcasting and Heathrow Airport. Both will receive clean, carbon-neutral power by utilizing Turboden Organic Rankine Cycle (ORC) turbogenerators. Turboden is a Pratt & Whitney Power Systems company.

British Sky Broadcasting Ltd (BSkyB) is a public satellite broadcasting company operating in the United Kingdom and Ireland. It is the largest pay-TV broadcaster in the United Kingdom with over 10 million subscribers. BSkyB is developing a 1 MW CCHP plant as an integral part of its carbon cutting emissions plans for its new studio, editing and transmission and data facility.

BAA Airports Limited, which operates six airports in the UK, including London Heathrow, is installing Turboden’s second ORC plant in the UK. London Heathrow is one of the busiest airports in the world, serving some 180 destinations in more than 90 countries. Turboden’s biomass-fuelled CCHP ORC unit at London Heathrow will use clean wood waste to produce 1.8 MW of electricity and 8MW of thermal heat and cooling to Terminals T2a and T2b, and heat only to Terminal T5. Construction of the Heathrow plant is almost complete and start-up is expected by summer.

Click here to read Pratt & Whitney's press release.

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1 comment:

John Alex said...

TravelDailyNews Heathrow Airport has been awarded the Carbon Trust Standard after saving enough energy over the last three years to power more than 6,300 homes for a year. The UK's hub airport improved its carbon efficiency by nearly 12 percent, despite turnover growth of 31 percent. This means that for every pound in income, 12 percent less carbon was emitted. Heathrow joins over 350 UK...Airport Transfers Stansted

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