Industry News
Demag to supply three cranes to major combined heat and power plant
D
emag will supply three process cranes equipped with grabs for an ambitious project to serve a major
combined heat and power plant. The order has been placed by Green Steam Hürth GmbH, a subsidiary of E.ON, which will build a biomass power plant with an output of 20MW of electricity and 87MW of heat energy at the site of the UPM paper plant in Hürth near Cologne, Germany. This project sees the first use of Demag Remote Operating Stations, which enable the remote control of crane systems. The power plant, where E.ON is
investing some €110 million and is due to go online in mid 2022, will provide heat for the Hürth paper factory and, at the same time, feed renewable energy into the grid. UPM produces more than 300,000 tonnes of high-quality newspaper made from recycled paper at the factory every year. The location has been well
selected, because the paper production operation needs a lot of heat (in the form of steam) and combined heat and power generation is particularly efficient. In this case, it is also particularly sustainable,
since the power plant is fuelled by wood residues, which E.ON procures in the region. According to E.ON, this will provide an efficient and reliable supply of virtually CO2 neutral energy to an industrial operation that requires a lot of energy. Demag will deliver two process
cranes for the automated continuous supply of wood to fire the boiler in the power plant. Some 45 tons of wood need to be fed around the clock every hour. The two double- girder cranes, which have a load capacity of 14 tonnes and a span of 20.6 meters, will travel on a crane runway measuring almost 100 metres in length. All of the crane travel drives feature variable speeds; energy recovery when braking and lowering loads enhances the energy efficiency of the cranes. Hydraulic multi-jaw grabs with a capacity of 12m3 will be used as load handling attachments.
Cranes continuously feeding fuel The crane systems will largely operate in automatic mode. The Demag Warehouse Management System (WMS) software will ensure, for example, that the bunkers are cleared, that the boiler is
continuously fed with the required quantities of wood and that both cranes complete their co-ordinated tasks.
Not only the fuel, but also the ash
as a residual material is handled by a Demag crane. The Demag engineers have specified a smaller double- girder process crane with a 5.4 tonne load capacity and a hydraulic grab for this task. The three crane systems will
operate under challenging conditions with high-humidity (up to 100%) and high-dust levels. They are ideally suited to meet these requirements, as Demag has already designed and delivered many cranes for refuse recycling installations and biomass power plants all over the world.
Demag ROS: crane control system with multiple views of the operating location Since it is very difficult to view the entire very long fuel bunker from a conventional crane cab, the project engineers at E.ON decided in favour of a special Demag option. If the cranes need to be operated under classic manual control, this can be done via a Remote Operation Station (ROS), which also serves
as a monitoring station when the cranes are running in automatic mode. ROS is a remote control station that includes all operating functions of a process crane with a crane operator seat – except that the operator does not view the crane and its operating environment directly, but via a widescreen monitor that shows images from several cameras in real time. The screen layout can be configured to meet process requirements, with information relevant to the process being automatically displayed. In theory, a station like this can be
located very far from the crane. At the Hürth biomass power plant, it is installed in the control centre, so the operator can benefit from improved working conditions. Thanks to the many installed
cameras, the operator has an even better view of the process than usually available from a crane cab. This is because the cameras can also ‘look’ where the normal field of vision would be restricted. More information Christoph Kreutzenbeck, Demag Marketing t. 02335 92 3907
Demag crane systems will ensure the continuous supply of fuel at the Hürth biomass power plant in future. Spring 2021 Forest Bioenergy Review 11
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