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10 Nov 2020

GE to Improve Gas Turbine Offering with New Australian Office

10 Nov 2020  by powerengineeringint.com   

GE has announced the opening of its new Perth Aeroderivative Services Level 2 facility and Tooling Store to provide enhanced support to its GE LM6000, LM2500 and LMS100 aero-derivative gas turbine fleet installed in Australia.

Image credit: GE

The facility will enable faster and more flexible execution of planned and unplanned maintenance, most of which would take place within the country, with a consequent reduction of the repair cycle time and logistics costs for Australian aeroderivative power plant operators.

In addition, the facility includes a Tooling Store – operated by FieldCore, the field services company owned by GE – which will serve the entire GE fleet within the Asia Pacific region to help ensure faster availability of tools for aero hot gas path section repairs and engine exchange tooling kits to accelerate completion time for outages.

With a presence in the region spanning more than 126 years, GE powers a variety of operations across Australia ranging from large fleets of baseload units in the mining industry to fast-starting high-efficiency units supporting renewables growth on the East Coast electricity grid.

With the opening of the centre, GE will already be servicing a fleet of over 50 turbines for power plant operators such as Synergy, Rio Tinto, Transalta, ATCO and Alinta among others.

According to the Australian Energy Update 2019 report, natural gas accounted for 25% of energy consumption in 2017–18. Gas consumption rose by 4% in 2017–18, with increased use in mining in Western Australia.

Australia is expected to reach 50% renewable energy generation by 2030 and is on track to exceed 75% renewables by 2040 according to Reputex Energy.

Gas-fired generators are an ideal complement to variable renewable resources because the technology can change power levels quickly, turn down to low levels when demand is less, and start up very rapidly. All of these attributes enable gas turbines to work in concert with renewables to maintain reliability in the Australian power system.

Sam Maresh, CEO of GE for Australia, said: “At GE, we are committed to supporting the Australian government’s goals of strengthening renewable energy generation. We have the right technology, domain expertise, and experience to provide cleaner, more accessible energy that Australia can depend on to power growth and prosperity.

“Australia’s renewables growth coupled with the expected retirement of large baseload coal-fired power stations are both ideal opportunities for our efficient aero-derivative gas turbines to maintain security of supply, integrate with renewables, and keep power up and running.”

GE’s aero-derivative fleet includes more than 2,800 gas turbines deployed in more than 60 countries representing more than 125GW of installed capacity.

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