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Determinanats of Capacity Factor

Power plants rarely operate at full capacity due to various technical and economic factors that limit their output. Plants may be offline for maintenance or equipment failures, limiting base load plants' capacity factors. Peaking plants' capacity factors are restricted because they only operate when electricity demand is highest. Intermittent renewable resources like solar and wind also have limited capacity factors due to their fuel sources' availability fluctuating with weather conditions. Hydroelectric plants' output depends on water supply levels. Restrictions on emissions or transmission can additionally require curtailing a plant's production.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
57 views1 page

Determinanats of Capacity Factor

Power plants rarely operate at full capacity due to various technical and economic factors that limit their output. Plants may be offline for maintenance or equipment failures, limiting base load plants' capacity factors. Peaking plants' capacity factors are restricted because they only operate when electricity demand is highest. Intermittent renewable resources like solar and wind also have limited capacity factors due to their fuel sources' availability fluctuating with weather conditions. Hydroelectric plants' output depends on water supply levels. Restrictions on emissions or transmission can additionally require curtailing a plant's production.
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Determinants of a plant capacity factor[edit]

There are several reasons why a plant would have a capacity factor lower than 100%. These
include technical constraints, such as availability of the plant, economic reasons, and availability
of the energy resource.
A plant can be out of service or operating at reduced output for part of the time due to equipment
failures or routine maintenance. This accounts for most of the unused capacity of base load
power plants. Base load plants usually have low costs per unit of electricity because they are
designed for maximum efficiency and are operated continuously at high output. Geothermal
power plants, nuclear power plants, coal-fired plants and bioenergy plants that burn solid
material are almost always operated as base load plants, as they can be difficult to adjust to suit
demand.
A plant can also have its output curtailed or intentionally left idle because the electricity is not
needed or because the price of electricity is too low to make production economical. This
accounts for most of the unused capacity of peaking power plants and load following power
plants. Peaking plants may operate for only a few hours per year or up to several hours per day.
Many other power plants operate only at certain times of the day or year because of variation in
loads and electricity prices. If a plant is only needed during the day, for example, even if it
operates at full power output from 8 am to 8 pm every day (12 hours) all year long, it would only
have a 50% capacity factor. Due to low capacity factors, electricity from peaking power plants is
relatively expensive because the limited generation has to cover the plant fixed costs.
A third reason is that a plant may not have the fuel available to operate all of the time. This can
apply to fossil generating stations with restricted fuels supplies, but most notably applies to
intermittent renewable resources.[8] Solar PV and wind turbines have a capacity factor limited by
the availability of their "fuel", sunshine and wind respectively. A hydroelectricity plant may have a
capacity factor lower than 100% due to restriction or scarcity of water, or its output may be
regulated to match the current power need, conserving its stored water for later usage.
Other reasons that a power plant may not have a capacity factor of 100% include restrictions or
limitations on air permits and limitations on transmission that force the plant to curtail output.

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