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Rochester Public Utility enlists partners to study fuel cell uses

Ark Valley and Touchstone Energy bring Caulk and Talk to local radio

Solar power lights up East Grand Forks bike path

Wind plus compressed air equals efficient energy storage in Iowa proposal

Solar-covered parking generates energy, rewards public transit riders

Energy Star honors two Partners of the Year in Western territory

Gunnison County pioneers new efficiency incentives

Mesa, Ariz., uses grants to investigate distributed, renewable energy

Western offers green products to Federal agencies
MCAS Yuma wins Western award with aggressive conservation plan

Topics from the Power Line
ASHRAE heating/cooling standards balance efficiency and comfort

Energy Shorts
Equipment Loan Program news
Calendar of events


Compressed air converts natural gas to energy more efficiently

Utilities can use off-peak electricity to compress air and store it in airtight underground caverns. When released from storage, the air expands through a combustion turbine to create electricity.

The off-peak electricity powers a motor/generator that drives compressors to force air into an underground storage reservoir. This process typically occurs when utility system demands and electricity costs are the lowest. When electric power demand peaks during the day, the process is reversed. The compressed air is returned to the surface, heated by natural gas in combustors and run through high-pressure and low-pressure expanders to power the motor/generator to produce electricity.

In a conventional powerplant, a typical natural gas turbine consumes nearly two-thirds of the natural gas because the gas drives the machine's compressor. In contrast, a compressed-air storage plant uses low-cost, heated, compressed air to power the turbines and create on-peak electricity, conserving some natural gas.

The concept of using stored compressed-air energy to help generate electricity is more than 30 years old. Two plants currently exist—an 11-year-old plant in McIntosh, Ala., and a 23-year-old plant in Germany, both with the compressed air stored in caverns created by salt deposits.