The “Hurry up” Pace for Flow Control and Treatment
Jeffrey Immelt of GE has called upon industry to adopt the same “hurry up” pace 
endemic to Silicon Valley.  This statement was made in conjunction with the 
initiative to maximize the value of information communicated by machines.  
This information can be used to improve operations and maintenance.  GE 
outlines impressive advantages of massive machine to machine communication.  
This leads to speculation that the information generated by pumps, valves, fans, 
etc. could be worth more than the equipment itself. 
McIlvaine is currently conducting a series of webinars for a large U.S. utility 
which is considering optimization systems offered by GE, Siemens, Emerson, 
Doosan and others. Better machine communication can contribute a NOx 
reduction of more than 10 percent. However, since the utility needs to achieve 
at least 70 percent reduction at four plants, optimization will only be part of 
the strategy.   It now appears that the most cost effective solution 
is a combination of five or more technologies. 
For this specific project the solution could involve the GE NeuCo optimization 
system in Massachusetts, the GE combustion (CE) in Connecticut, the GE (formerly 
Betz) treatment chemicals in Pennsylvania and the GE (formerly Alstom/CE) scrubbing 
technologies (Tennessee and Sweden) along with changes in wastewater treatment 
and maybe even ZLD as furnished by the GE water groups in Minnesota, Washington 
and other areas. The utility has to determine the best interaction of all these 
technologies.  GE also has to maximize the communication among its 
own technology providers who, as previously independent companies, are not part 
of a seamless operation.
The series of webinars using the McIlvaine Global Decisions Orchard 
http://www.mcilvainecompany.com/Decision_Tree/subscriber/Tree/Default.htm  
is demonstrating the value of organization and decisive classification but also 
a “hurry up” pace through the power of the wise crowd.  The utility will 
likely choose a unique combination of technologies which had not been envisioned 
at the beginning of the two-month webinar series.  Unexpected input from 
many different sources has made a major contribution to the likely choice.
The Wikipedia entry for the wise crowd provides the following criteria:
| 
												
												
												Wise Crowd Criteria | |
| 
												
												
												Criteria | 
												
												
												Description | 
| 
												
												Diversity of opinion | 
												
												Each person should have private 
												information even if it's just 
												an eccentric interpretation 
												of the known facts. | 
| 
												
												Independence | 
												
												People's opinions aren't 
												determined by the opinions of 
												those around them. | 
| 
												
												Decentralization | 
												
												People are able to specialize 
												and draw on local knowledge. | 
| 
												
												Aggregation | 
												
												Some mechanism exists for 
												turning private judgments into a 
												collective decision. | 
All these criteria have been met with the webinar and Decision Guide approach 
used on this project.  McIlvaine intends to take full advantage of the wise 
crowd in the future.
For more information on the specific Decision Guides being used by power plants 
for flow and treatment decisions, click on: 
44I Power 
Plant Air Quality Decisions
59D Gas 
Turbine and Combined Cycle Decisions
For more input on how wise crowd initiatives will be used to help various 
suppliers, click on: 
N028 
Industrial Valves: World Market
N027 FGD 
Market and Strategies  
N026 
Water and Wastewater Treatment Chemicals: World Market
Utility E-Alert Tracks Billions of Dollars of New Coal-fired Power Plants on a 
Weekly Basis
Here are some headlines from the Utility E-Alert.
UTILITY E-ALERT
#1288 – September 2, 2016
Table of Contents
COAL – US
·      
NRG’s Limestone Electric Generating Station to switch to Cleaner Coal
·      
Southwest Research Institute will lead $3.3 Million Oxy-Combustion Pilot Plant 
Study
·      
Environmentalists win lawsuit against E. D. Edwards Coal-fired Power Plant in 
IllinoisSponsored 
by
·      
NRG Penalized for Faulty Wastewater Treatment at Maryland Coal-fired Power 
Plants
·      
Major Coal Waste cleanup Project at Clinch River in Southwest Virginia
·      
Revision of State Permits will trigger ELG Expenditures
COAL – WORLD
·      
PLN calls for Tender to build Two Power Plants 
·      
Indonesia Cirebon 2 Coal-fired Power Project appoints Black & Veatch as 
Consultants 
·      
Hollysys wins Contract to provide Proprietary Distributed Control System for 
Ultra-Supercritical Coal-fired Power Generating Units to Fujian Luoyuanwan 
·      
Dutch must close Older Coal-fired Power Plants to meet Energy Targets
The
41F 
Utility E-Alert 
is issued weekly and covers the coal-fired projects, regulations and other 
information important to the suppliers. It is $950/yr. but is included in the 
$3020
42EI 
Utility Tracking System 
which has data on every plant and project plus networking directories and 
many other features.
Upcoming Hot Topic Hours
| 
																
																      
																DATE | 
																
																
																HOT TOPIC HOUR 
																AND DECISION 
																GUIDE SCHEDULE 
																
																
																The opportunity 
																to interact on 
																important issues | 
| 
												
												 September 8, 2016 | 
												
												
												PacifiCorp Webinar 5 on front 
												end NOx reduction 
												
												- Review of options for NOx 
												reduction including combustion 
												modifications, reburn, SNCR, and 
												optimization with review of 
												previous presentations of 
												Emerson, Doosan, Siemens and GE. 
												 A number of case histories, now 
												being posted to PPAQD, will also 
												be reviewed. Summaries of phone 
												calls to end users may also be 
												included. | 
| 
												
												TBA 
												
												
												Markets | 
												
												
												Food 
												- Analysis 
												of 12 separate 
												applications within food and 
												beverage with analysis of valve, 
												pump, compressor, filter, 
												analyzer and chemical options; 
												impact of new technologies such 
												as forward osmosis. | 
| 
												
												TBA 
												
												
												Markets | 
												
												
												Municipal Wastewater 
												
												- 
												
												Quality of pumps, valves, 
												filters, and analyzers in 
												Chinese and Asian plants; new 
												pollutant challenges; water 
												purification for reuse. | 
| 
												
												TBA 
												
												
												Markets | 
												
												
												Mobile Emissions 
												
												-Reduction 
												in CO, VOCs, and particulate in 
												fuels, oils, and air used in on 
												and off road vehicles; impact of  
												RDE and failure of NOx 
												traps and the crisis in Europe 
												created by the focus on clean 
												diesel. | 
Click here to Register for the Webinars
----------
You can register for our free McIlvaine Newsletters at:
http://home.mcilvainecompany.com/index.php?option=com_rsform&formId=5
Bob McIlvaine
President
847-784-0012 ext 112
rmcilvaine@mcilvainecompany.com
www.mcilvainecompany.com