Rumford Combined Cycle Power Plant is a 274.5MW gas fired power project. It is located in Maine, the US. The project is currently active. It has been developed in single phase. Post completion of construction, the project got commissioned in July 2000.

Project Type Total Capacity (MW) Active Capacity (MW) Pipeline Capacity (MW) Project Status Project Location Project Developer
Thermal 274.5 274.5 Active Maine, the US

Description

The project is currently owned by The Carlyle Group.

It is a Combined Cycle Gas Turbine (CCGT) power plant that is used for Baseload. The fuel is procured from Portland Natural Gas (PNGTS).

The project generated 232,573MWh of electricity.

Development Status

The project got commissioned in July 2000.

Power Purchase Agreement

The power generated from the project is sold to ISO New England under a power purchase agreement.

Contractors Involved

GE Power was selected as the turbine supplier for the Gas fired project. The company provided 1 unit of 7F.04 gas turbine with 179.4MW nameplate capacity.

GE Power was selected as the turbine supplier for the Gas fired project. The company provided 1 unit of A10 steam turbine with 95.1MW nameplate capacity.

GE Power supplied electric generator for the project.

Nooter/Eriksen supplied steam boiler for the project.

Wood Group Power Operations is the O&M contractor for thermal power project. The operation and maintenance contract commenced from 2010, for a period of 5 years.

Methodology

All power projects included in this report are drawn from GlobalData’s Power Intelligence Center. The information regarding the project parameters is sourced through secondary information sources such as electric utilities, equipment manufacturers, developers, project proponent’s – news, deals and financial reporting, regulatory body, associations, government planning reports and publications. Wherever needed the information is further validated through primary from various stakeholders across the power value chain and professionals from leading players within the power sector.