fbpx
Wikipedia

Tracy Thermal Generating Station

The Tracy Thermal Generating Station is a retired 660-megawatt heavy fuel oil-fueled thermal power station built from 1962 by the Shawinigan Water & Power Company and completed by Hydro-Québec after the buyout of all private electric utilities by the government of Quebec in 1963. Commissioned between 1964 and 1968, the plant is located on the banks of the Saint Lawrence River in the city of Sorel-Tracy, in the Montérégie Region.

Tracy Thermal Generating Station
The Tracy generating station in 2006.
Official nameCentrale thermique de Tracy
CountryCanada
LocationSorel-Tracy, Quebec
Coordinates45°59′50″N 73°10′20″W / 45.99722°N 73.17222°W / 45.99722; -73.17222
StatusDecommissioned
Construction beganMarch 1962 (1962-03)
Commission date1964
Decommission dateMarch 1, 2011 (2011-03-01)
Owner(s)Hydro-Québec
Thermal power station
Primary fuelHeavy fuel oil
Power generation
Units operational4 × 165 MW
Make and modelParsons[1]
Nameplate capacity660 MW
External links
CommonsRelated media on Commons

Mainly used as a peaker plant, the Tracy facility was usually running during cold spells in the winter. It was sometimes operated year-round to supplement hydroelectric generation during low-water years.

Although it was operated only sporadically, the generating station has been criticized for its contribution to air pollution as it was one of Quebec's major sources of carbon dioxide (CO
2
), sulfur dioxide (SO
2
), nitrogen oxides (NO
x
) and particulates (PM). Some commentators have accused Hydro-Québec of unnecessarily operating the Tracy thermal plant to export electricity by taking advantage of low fuel prices at certain times.

The Tracy Thermal Generating Station was kept as a reserve during the 2010–2011 winter and permanently shut down on March 1, 2011. Its dismantlement has started in 2013.

Location edit

The power station is located in the former town of Tracy on the south shore of the Saint Lawrence River, 75 km (45 mi) north-east of Montreal, Quebec. Established in 1954, the town is separated from Sorel by the Richelieu River and has a long industrial and shipbuilding history, including the Marine Industries shipyard that has operated there since 1937. Other heavy industries, including foundries and steel mills, have set up shop in town.[2] Tracy merged with Sorel to become the city of Sorel-Tracy in 2000.[3]

The property is located at 12125 Marie-Victorin Road. The plant has been built on a 50.6-hectare (125 acres) lot, crossed by Quebec Route 132 (Marie-Victorin Road) and a Canadian National railroad track 6.5 km (4 mi) upstream from downtown Sorel-Tracy.[4]

History edit

Quebec utilities were faced with rapid demand growth in the decade that followed the end of World War II, as electricity consumption doubled in the Montreal area served by government-owned Hydro-Québec. The company initiated an ambitious construction program, building the Bersimis-1, Bersimis-2, Carillon and the third phase of the Beauharnois generating stations to keep up.[5] After commissioning the Beaumont generating station in 1958, the Shawinigan Water & Power Company had exhausted most of its potential for the significant expansion of hydropower on the Saint-Maurice River and turned to Hydro-Québec to secure additional supplies. In February 1959, the Crown corporation informed officials at SW&P that it would be unable to supply incremental blocks of firm power because the supply needs of its own retail customers were just barely met.[6]

SW&P then began planning for a 300-megawatt thermal power plant in Tracy to be built at a cost of C$45 million.[7] The plant was designed to increase the company's peaking capacity to supplement its hydroelectric generation on the Saint-Maurice.[8] It was slated to burn residual fuel oil, a by-product of a petrochemical plant to be built in nearby Varennes by a subsidiary, Shawinigan Chemicals Limited.[9]

 
Sorel-Tracy.

Company officials raised the issue in November 1959 with the minister of Hydraulic Resources, Daniel Johnson, whose response was "mostly negative". The Tracy project, and the planned development of a hydroelectric power station on the Upper Saint-Maurice at Rapide des Coeurs, remained dormant for a while as Quebec was a few months away from a provincial election.[8]

The new Premier, Jean Lesage, approved the new plant in May 1961, conditional to a commitment to build both the hydroelectric generating station at Rapide des Coeurs[10] and the petrochemical plant in Varennes.[11] The construction of the generating station and the petrochemical plant were announced on July 31.[12] Work on the first phase of the Tracy plant started in March 1962 with United Engineers and Constructors of Philadelphia as the lead contractor.[13] The work site employed 800 people.[14]

The first two units were completed after Hydro-Québec's hostile takeover of SW&P and every other investor-owned public utility in the province, as part of Quebec's nationalization of electricity policy.[11] Shortly after the 1963 buyout, Hydro ordered a second set of two units, to be built next to the first two,[15] and gave the construction contract to Shawinigan Engineering. Work started in March 1965, and the last unit was delivered in February 1968.[13]

In a booklet published by the public relations branch of Hydro-Québec in August 1965, shortly after the commissioning of the second unit, the utility explains its decision to upgrade the plant by "the urgent need to ensure extra capacity now and the advisability of creating an adequate reserve for future operations", adding that the role of the plant would change over its operating life.[15] Cheaper to build than a hydroelectric power station and located closer to the major load centres, the plant could be used as spare capacity to supply peak-hour energy to the system, supplement hydro production in low-water years, and could come on-line during power outages or act as synchronous condensers, providing reactive power to control the voltage on the grid.[16]

Transition between the former and the new owner during construction hit a few snags. The first two units are separated from the two units ordered by Hydro-Québec by a wall, because SW&P bond holders required the assets of the new subsidiary to remain distinct from those of its new parent company.[17]

Technical overview edit

 
The generating station's four smokestacks.
 
The fuel storage tanks.
 
The high voltage terminal station, next to the plant.

Thermal power plants play a marginal role in Hydro-Québec's system, which is dominated by hydropower. In 2009, non-nuclear thermal generation accounted for 4.4% of nameplate capacity but only generated 446 GWh, 0.3% of total energy production.[18] More expensive to run and more polluting than hydroelectric power plants, thermal plants are used to generate power during peak conditions, but most of the company's thermal plants serve remote communities not connected to the main power grid in Nunavik, on the Lower North Shore, in Haute-Mauricie and in the Magdalen Islands.[19]

A thermal power station such as Tracy converts the energy contained in heavy fuel oil into heat, motion, and then into electrical energy. Burning fuel vaporize water and the steam expands to drive a turbine that spins the rotor of an alternator to generate electricity. Condensing water is then reused for another cycle.[20] In the process, water is preheated six times, raising its temperature from 27 °C (80 °F) to 238 °C (460 °F), and goes through a deaerator and an economizer before entering the boiler at a temperature of 340.5 °C (645 °F), close to the boiling point under pressure.[21]

Each boiler is 12 m (40 ft) long and 9 m (30 ft) wide at its base and rises to 55 m (180 ft), the equivalent of a 13-floor building.[22] At the top, a 16 m (50 ft) long steam drum separates water and saturated steam. The boiler is heated by 16 burners, four in each corner, which can be retracted and tilted to control the steam temperature.[23] The steam becomes an ideal gas at 539.4 °C (1,003 °F)[24][25] and a pressure of 12.75 MPa (1,850 PSI) after being forced into the superheater.[24] The plant boilers have been designed to be converted to coal in the event that it became a cheaper solution. Spaces for storing and handling coal were set aside in the planning phase.[26]

At its rated power, the plant burned 159,000 litres (1,000 barrels) of heavy fuel oil per hour.[25][27] Ten 200,000-barrel fuel storage tanks are located behind the plant[28] and were supplied with fuel from the Montreal and Lévis refineries by tanker[29] or by rail.[30]

Each unit was designed to "hot" start within 20 or 30 minutes. A cold start can take between three and four hours. It is a delicate operation, since moving parts must be relatively uniformly warmed to prevent damage.[31] The success of this operation involves more than 70 steps and is controlled by a sequence monitoring system to avoid missteps. Cooling off a unit after use required precautions to prevent buckling of the main shaft.[32]

The plant was easily recognizable by its four 137-metre (449 ft) high red-and-white smokestacks.[29] Framed with safety valves, the chimneys were only 82 m (270 ft) tall when the plant opened in the 1960s,[15] but were raised in 1980 in response to environmental considerations.[13] The plant's maximum annual output was limited to 2.6 TWh due to air pollution regulations.[33]

The transmission towers near the plant is part of a 735 kV transmission line crossing the Saint Lawrence River. They are 174.6 m (573 ft) high, making them the tallest in Canada.[34] The power station's terminal substation is linked to the power grid by four 230 kV lines to Boucherville, Varennes, Contrecoeur, Carignan (lines 2320 and 2322) and Sorel-Tracy (lines 2332 and 2336).[4][35]

Operation edit

 
The plant's main gate.

The Tracy Thermal Generating Station was one of four peaking power plants on the Hydro-Québec grid. It was primarily used in winter to boost capacity, as required by the widespread use of electric heating and poor home insulation in Quebec. It was also sporadically operated as a base load power plant between 1989 and 1991, in 1998 and in 2003–2004[36] to mitigate low water conditions in the company's reservoirs.

Since the 1980s, calls for the closure of the plant were heard each time it was run for an extended period.[37][38] Nearby residents mainly complained about noise and odours from the generating station.[33]

In December 1990, Quebec's Minister of Energy, Lise Bacon, asked Hydro-Québec to consider converting the plant to natural gas to lower sulfur dioxide emissions as well as a cost-saving measure – at the time, heavy fuel oil was sold at $C28/barrel while the equivalent natural gas was selling for C$18.[39]

In 1992, Hydro-Québec announced a C$300 million refurbishment program to upgrade the boilers to burn natural gas or heavy fuel oil by 1995.[40] The plant was seldom used between 1992 and 1997 and the modernization program was scaled down from C$165 to C$130 million. Retiring the plant was considered as a cost-cutting measure in the summer of 1996. Hydro-Québec decided against shutting down the plant but temporarily closed two units.[41] Natural gas conversion was also shelved as it was "not beneficial at the moment".[42]

Extended operation periods edit

 
The plant was operated extensively between June 2003 and May 2004 because of a serious precipitation shortfall.

Hydro-Québec restarted the plant during the massive ice storm of January 1998.[43] In July, the utility signed a one-year contract with the Ultramar refinery in Lévis for heavy fuel oil deliveries at $C13 per barrel, a price "never seen before", according to the company's CEO, André Caillé.[30] Despite denials by Hydro-Québec officials, the operation of the Tracy plant was seen by many observers as evidence of low reservoir levels.[30][44] A few months later, the company was forced to admit levels of its reservoirs were low.[45][46]

After being idle for two years to complete repairs, the plant was run at capacity for 5 weeks, from June 14 to July 23, 2001, to take advantage of high prices on neighbouring electricity markets and cheap fuel[47] and generated close to 200 GWh.[36] That summer, Hydro-Québec took delivery of 480,000 barrels of heavy oil, and a 270,000-barrel load in August. When operating at full capacity, the plant consumed 20,000 bpd.[47]

The plant's units were put back to service in mid-June 2003 in response to a further decline in reservoir levels after two years of improvement.[48] In October, Le Devoir newspaper reported that three strategic reservoirs (Manic-5, LG-2 and Caniapiscau) reached levels described as "alarming" as of May 2003.[49] With a runoff deficit reaching 23 TWh, the Tracy generating station ran for 11 months out of 12 in 2003. The plant had a record year, generating 1.75 TWh, beating its previous best year in 1990.[50]

The very cold temperatures recorded in mid-January 2004 increased domestic demand to record levels and added to the supply problems, even as the thermal plant was kept running at full capacity. In four days, Hydro-Québec broke its historical peak demand four times, twice on January 15 while Montreal was freezing under −30 °C (−22 °F) weather. On that day, system demand reached 35,818 MW at 7:18 am and climbed to 36,279 MW at 5:30 pm.[51]

The year-round use of the thermal power station fostered a strong discontent among people living nearby, who began registering complaints with the company and their elected officials. During the summer of 2003, a few people's houses and property were soiled with mysterious reddish droplets for which Hydro-Québec paid compensation, recognizing that these droplets could be related to "possible releases from the power plant."[52]

After meeting a delegation of Sorel-Tracy citizens led by mayor Marcel Robert on March 29, 2004, company officials pledged to stop operating the plant past May 31, 2004, and limit its future use to peak periods only.[53] The decision met both Quebec's[54] and regional authorities demands, including the preservation of local jobs.[55]

Environment edit

The Tracy generating station was the only major thermal power station owned by Hydro-Québec on the main power grid in 2011 – except for three gas turbines in Bécancour, La Citière and Cadillac[56] — and it was the utility's main source of air pollutants for most of its operational life.[57] During the last 30 years of its operational life, the Tracy thermal generating station was faced with increasingly more stringent environmental rules. The Canada-US Agreements on acid rain,[37] new regulations lowering the sulfur content of fuel and greenhouse gas emissions regulations gradually constrained its operational flexibility outside of peak hours.

The power station was operated 4,500 hours in 2003[58] and emitted 11,316 tonnes of SO
2
and 6,284 tonnes of NO
x
,[59] which was above the 5,000-tonne cap for the southern Quebec Pollutant Emission Management Area (PEMA) under the 2000 Ozone Annex of the bilateral Air Quality Agreement.[60] In 2004, the power station released 1.2 megatonnes of CO
2
,[61] 6,674 tonnes of SO
2
, and 4,010 tonnes of NO
x
.[59] That year, the Tracy plant operated for 2,355 hours. Emissions were significantly cut in later years as it ran for 373 hours in 2005,[58] down to only 7 hours in 2010.[62]

The Quebec government climate change action plan increased the costs of keeping the plant open. Starting in 2007, the plant's share of the C$200 million carbon levy for industrial users of fossil fuels was evaluated at C$4.5 million.[63] A new air quality regulation passed in 2011 lowered the NO
x
cap to 2,100 tonnes per year[64] and required the power station to be equipped with a selective catalytic reduction system, a C$75 million investment according to a 2010 economic assessment prepared by the Quebec Department of Sustainable Development, Environment and Wildlife.[65]

Retirement and dismantlement edit

 
Decommissioning work at the plant has been delayed following the bankruptcy of EDS Canada, in December 2013.
 
The plant, without its smokestacks, during its dismantlement in March 2015.

With the commissioning of new dams in the James Bay area, the Tracy plant ceased operations prior to the 2010–2011 winter to be kept as a reserve.[66][67] It was officially retired on March 1, 2011.[68] Dismantlement work is scheduled to begin in January 2013 and will last approximately one year.[62] The C$19 million (£12 million) contract was awarded to US-based firm EDS Decommissioning, a subsidiary of the Silverdell Environmental Group. EDS will be in charge of decommissioning and dismantling the plant, including asbestos removal, tearing down the structures and selling reusable assets. The contractor expects to market "approximately 37,000 tonnes of reusable plant, equipment and metals" for resale.[69]

Future use of the riverfront property owned by Hydro-Québec has not yet been finalized. At the end of 2011, the Société des traversiers du Québec expressed an interest in moving its Sorel ferry terminal at Bassin Kaskiaik to near the power station as a way to increase traffic.[70] As of October 2012, this scenario is among five options evaluated by a consultant retained by the Quebec government.[71]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Christopher Bergesen (December 8, 2012). "Steam-Electric Plants in Canada – other fuels". Power Plants Around the World. Bethesda, MD. Archived from the original on July 19, 2009. Retrieved January 19, 2013.
  2. ^ Société historique Pierre de Saurel (2003). "Histoire de Sorel et Tracy". Ville de Sorel-Tracy (in French). Retrieved June 3, 2014.
  3. ^ "Grogne contre les hausses de taxes dans le secteur Tracy". Radio-Canada Nouvelles (in French). CBC/Radio-Canada. July 27, 2011. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  4. ^ a b Paradis 1965, p. 2.
  5. ^ Bolduc, Hogue & Larouche 1989, p. 137-142.
  6. ^ Bellavance 1994, p. 196-197.
  7. ^ Bellavance 1994, p. 189.
  8. ^ a b Bellavance 1994, p. 190.
  9. ^ Bellavance 1994, p. 189, 263.
  10. ^ Hydro-Québec built a 76-MW run-of-the-river hydroelectric power station at Rapide des Coeurs in the 2000s.
  11. ^ a b Bellavance 1994, p. 191.
  12. ^ McKenzie, Bob (August 1, 1961). "$65 Million Development Boost To Quebec Industry: Power, Petrochemical Plants Announced By Shawinigan". The Gazette. Montréal. p. 1. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  13. ^ a b c Béliveau, Isabelle (April 27, 2004). . Les 2 Rives / La Voix (in French). Sorel-Tracy. Archived from the original on June 5, 2014. Retrieved January 10, 2013.
  14. ^ Thibault, Bertrand (August 1, 1961). "Bientôt une grosse nouvelle au sujet d'une sidérurgie au Québec (M. Lesage)". L'Action catholique (in French). Quebec City. p. 1. Retrieved January 17, 2013.
  15. ^ a b c Paradis 1965, p. 4.
  16. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 6-8.
  17. ^ Bolduc, Hogue & Larouche 1989, p. 184-185.
  18. ^ Hydro-Québec 2010, p. 37.
  19. ^ Hydro-Québec. "Wind Power and Other Sources of Energy: Fossil fuels". Understanding Electricity. Retrieved January 20, 2013.
  20. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 10.
  21. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 12.
  22. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 13.
  23. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 22.
  24. ^ a b Paradis 1965, p. 14.
  25. ^ a b Fortin, Richard (August 15, 1989). "Un tuyau éclate et la centrale de Tracy ne redémarre pas". La Presse (in French). Montréal. p. A3.
  26. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 22, 24.
  27. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 24.
  28. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 6.
  29. ^ a b Hydro-Québec (2009). (in French). Archived from the original on May 3, 2009.
  30. ^ a b c Asselin, Pierre; Baril, Hélène (July 29, 1998). "Ultramar alimentera la centrale de Tracy". Le Soleil (in French). Quebec City. p. A12.
  31. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 26.
  32. ^ Paradis 1965, p. 28.
  33. ^ a b Baril, Hélène (March 31, 2004). "Hydro stoppe la production de la centrale de Tracy". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. Business 1.
  34. ^ Hydro-Québec. "Power Transmission: Towers". Understanding Electricity. Retrieved January 10, 2013.
  35. ^ Carte des installations de transport d’énergie au Québec [Map of electric transmission infrastructure in Quebec] (PDF) (Map). Hydro-Québec TransÉnergie. 2006. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  36. ^ a b Hydro-Québec Production (March 19, 2004). Réponses d'Hydro-Québec Production à la demande de renseignements no. 1 de la Régie (Docket R-3526-2004) (PDF) (in French). Régie de l'énergie. p. 32. Retrieved January 10, 2013.
  37. ^ a b Venne, Michel (November 29, 1989). "Hydro accusée d'augmenter les pluies acides". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. C9.
  38. ^ Côté, Charles (March 3, 2004). "Utilisée à plein régime, la centrale de Tracy pollue". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. A13.
  39. ^ Le Cours, Rudy (January 22, 1991). "La centrale de Tracy devrait fonctionner encore cet été". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. D4.
  40. ^ La Presse Canadienne (April 9, 1992). "Hydro modernise sa centrale de Tracy". Le Soleil (in French). Quebec City. p. B3.
  41. ^ Binsse, Lisa (January 15, 1997). "La centrale de Tracy reste ouverte". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. D5.
  42. ^ Binsse, Lisa (November 13, 1997). "Le thermique n'est pas une option rentable". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. E1.
  43. ^ Dutrisac, Robert; Myles, Brian (July 28, 1998). "Hydro ne craint pas la pénurie: En cas de problème, la société d'État peut réduire ses exportations". Le Devoir (in French). Montreal. p. A1.
  44. ^ Tison, Marie (July 24, 1998). "Le coût du mazout incite Hydro-Québec à rouvrir la centrale de Tracy". Le Nouvelliste (in French). Trois-Rivières. p. 5.
  45. ^ Francoeur, Louis-Gilles (December 3, 1998). "Réserves d'eau: Hydro envisage le pire. La société d'État se dit confiante de faire face même au scénario extrême". Le Devoir (in French). Montreal. p. A1.
  46. ^ "Low reservoirs prompt utility to reopen plant". CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. November 13, 1998. Retrieved June 3, 2014.
  47. ^ a b Binsse, Lisa (August 16, 2001). "Tracy reprend du service". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. D1.
  48. ^ Baril, Hélène (July 17, 2003). "En plein été, Hydro doit user sa centrale au mazout". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. D1.
  49. ^ Francoeur, Louis-Gilles (October 14, 2003). "Hydro pousse la centrale thermique de Tracy au maximum: La recherche de profits provoque aussi une baisse des niveaux d'eau des grands barrages". Le Devoir (in French). Montreal. p. A1. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  50. ^ Baril, Hélène (March 24, 2004). "La centrale de Tracy a battu des records de production en 2003". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. Business 1.
  51. ^ Duchesne, André (January 16, 2004). "La vague de froid et Hydro-Québec: Quatrième record en quatre jours". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. A8.
  52. ^ Côté, Charles (March 3, 2004). "Utilisée à plein régime, la centrale de Tracy pollue". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. A13.
  53. ^ Baril, Hélène (March 31, 2004). "Hydro stoppe la production de la centrale de Tracy". La Presse (in French). Montreal. p. Business 1.
  54. ^ Gouvernement du Québec (June 29, 2004). Centrale de cogénération de Bécancour par TransCanada Energy Ltd. (Dossier 3211-12-75) (PDF) (in French). Ministère du Développement durable, de l'Environnement et des Parcs du Québec. p. 11. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
  55. ^ Ville de Sorel-Tracy (March 29, 2004). "La centrale thermique de Sorel-Tracy retrouvera sa vocation de centrale d'appoint" (in French). Retrieved May 14, 2009.
  56. ^ Hydro-Québec 2012, p. 114.
  57. ^ Gouvernement du Québec (January 2006). "Inventaire québécois des émissions de gaz à effet de serre en 2003 et évolution depuis 1990" (in French). Ministère du Développement durable, de l'Environnement et des Parcs du Québec. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
  58. ^ a b La Presse Canadienne (May 27, 2006). "Le Québec a réduit ses émissions de GES en 2004". Le Devoir (in French). Montreal. p. A8. Retrieved January 9, 2013.
  59. ^ a b Canada (October 11, 2013). "Facility & Substance Information for Hydro-Québec – Centrale de Tracy". National Pollutant Release Inventory. Environment Canada. Retrieved June 3, 2014.
  60. ^ Canada (2006). Canada – United States Air Quality Agreement: 2006 Progress Report (PDF). Ottawa: Environment Canada. p. 13. ISBN 0-662-44080-3.
  61. ^ Canada. "Facility and GHG emissions – Facility information (year: 2004)". Environment Canada. Retrieved June 3, 2014..
  62. ^ a b Lambert, Julie (January 9, 2013). "Sorel-Tracy : Démolition de la centrale thermique d'Hydro-Québec". Le Journal de Montréal (in French). Retrieved January 9, 2013.
  63. ^ "Québec passe le chapeau". Radio-Canada Nouvelles (in French). CBC/Radio-Canada. June 6, 2007. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  64. ^ Section 66 of the Clean Air Regulation (2011), R.S.Q. c. Q-2, r. 4.1 specifically targets the Tracy power station.
  65. ^ MDDEP 2010, p. 13.
  66. ^ TVA Nouvelles (November 10, 2010). "Coup dur pour Sorel-Tracy: Hydro va fermer sa centrale". Argent (in French). Archived from the original on May 31, 2014. Retrieved June 3, 2014.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  67. ^ Baril, Hélène (November 10, 2010). "Centrale de Sorel-Tracy: Hydro stoppe les moteurs". La Presse (in French). Montreal. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  68. ^ Grégoire-Racicot, Louise (November 4, 2011). . La Voix (in French). Sorel-Tracy, Quebec. Archived from the original on March 18, 2014. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  69. ^ "Silverdell wins Canadian power plant decommissioning". The Construction Index. January 14, 2013. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  70. ^ Grégoire-Racicot, Louise (December 11, 2011). "Déménagement possible de la traverse à la hauteur de la centrale thermique". Les 2 Rives et La Voix (in French). Sorel-Tracy. Retrieved January 10, 2013.
  71. ^ Bellemare, Pierre (October 8, 2012). . L'Action d'Autray (in French). Joliette. Archived from the original on November 13, 2012. Retrieved January 16, 2013.

Works cited edit

  • Bellavance, Claude (1994). Shawinigan Water and Power (1898–1963) : Formation et déclin d'un groupe industriel au Québec [Shawinigan Water and Power (1898–1963): Formation and decline of an industrial group in Quebec] (in French). Montreal: Boréal. 446 p. ISBN 2-89052-586-4.
  • Bolduc, André; Hogue, Clarence; Larouche, Daniel (1989), Hydro-Québec, l'héritage d'un siècle d'électricité (in French) (third ed.), Montreal: Libre-Expression / Forces, 341 p, ISBN 2-89111-388-8 (also available in English, under the title Hydro-Québec After 100 Years of Electricity)
  • Government of Québec (May 13, 2010). Règlement sur l'assainissement de l'atmoshpère: Étude d'impact économique [Clean Air Regulation: Economic impact study] (PDF) (in French). Quebec City: Ministère du Développement durable, de l'Environnement et de la Faune. 60 p. Retrieved January 18, 2013.
  • Hydro-Québec (2010). Sustainability Report 2009 (PDF). Montreal: Hydro-Québec. 44 p. ISBN 978-2-550-58105-5. Retrieved January 18, 2013.
  • Hydro-Québec (2012). Annual Report 2011 (PDF). Montreal: Hydro-Québec. 116 p. ISBN 978-2-550-63872-8. ISSN 0702-6706. Retrieved March 28, 2012.
  • Paradis, Paul (1965). Tracy Thermal Generating Station. Montreal: Hydro-Québec. 32 p. OCLC 77448028.

External links edit

  • Thermal power plants, on Hydro-Québec's website
  • National Pollutant Release Inventory data on the Tracy thermal generating station

tracy, thermal, generating, station, this, article, about, thermal, power, station, quebec, power, plant, nevada, frank, tracy, generating, station, retired, megawatt, heavy, fuel, fueled, thermal, power, station, built, from, 1962, shawinigan, water, power, c. This article is about the thermal power station in Quebec For the power plant in Nevada see Frank A Tracy Generating Station The Tracy Thermal Generating Station is a retired 660 megawatt heavy fuel oil fueled thermal power station built from 1962 by the Shawinigan Water amp Power Company and completed by Hydro Quebec after the buyout of all private electric utilities by the government of Quebec in 1963 Commissioned between 1964 and 1968 the plant is located on the banks of the Saint Lawrence River in the city of Sorel Tracy in the Monteregie Region Tracy Thermal Generating StationThe Tracy generating station in 2006 Official nameCentrale thermique de TracyCountryCanadaLocationSorel Tracy QuebecCoordinates45 59 50 N 73 10 20 W 45 99722 N 73 17222 W 45 99722 73 17222StatusDecommissionedConstruction beganMarch 1962 1962 03 Commission date1964Decommission dateMarch 1 2011 2011 03 01 Owner s Hydro QuebecThermal power stationPrimary fuelHeavy fuel oilPower generationUnits operational4 165 MWMake and modelParsons 1 Nameplate capacity660 MWExternal linksCommonsRelated media on Commons edit on Wikidata Mainly used as a peaker plant the Tracy facility was usually running during cold spells in the winter It was sometimes operated year round to supplement hydroelectric generation during low water years Although it was operated only sporadically the generating station has been criticized for its contribution to air pollution as it was one of Quebec s major sources of carbon dioxide CO2 sulfur dioxide SO2 nitrogen oxides NOx and particulates PM Some commentators have accused Hydro Quebec of unnecessarily operating the Tracy thermal plant to export electricity by taking advantage of low fuel prices at certain times The Tracy Thermal Generating Station was kept as a reserve during the 2010 2011 winter and permanently shut down on March 1 2011 Its dismantlement has started in 2013 Contents 1 Location 2 History 3 Technical overview 4 Operation 4 1 Extended operation periods 5 Environment 6 Retirement and dismantlement 7 See also 8 References 9 Works cited 10 External linksLocation editThe power station is located in the former town of Tracy on the south shore of the Saint Lawrence River 75 km 45 mi north east of Montreal Quebec Established in 1954 the town is separated from Sorel by the Richelieu River and has a long industrial and shipbuilding history including the Marine Industries shipyard that has operated there since 1937 Other heavy industries including foundries and steel mills have set up shop in town 2 Tracy merged with Sorel to become the city of Sorel Tracy in 2000 3 The property is located at 12125 Marie Victorin Road The plant has been built on a 50 6 hectare 125 acres lot crossed by Quebec Route 132 Marie Victorin Road and a Canadian National railroad track 6 5 km 4 mi upstream from downtown Sorel Tracy 4 History editSee also Shawinigan Water amp Power Company and History of Hydro Quebec Quebec utilities were faced with rapid demand growth in the decade that followed the end of World War II as electricity consumption doubled in the Montreal area served by government owned Hydro Quebec The company initiated an ambitious construction program building the Bersimis 1 Bersimis 2 Carillon and the third phase of the Beauharnois generating stations to keep up 5 After commissioning the Beaumont generating station in 1958 the Shawinigan Water amp Power Company had exhausted most of its potential for the significant expansion of hydropower on the Saint Maurice River and turned to Hydro Quebec to secure additional supplies In February 1959 the Crown corporation informed officials at SW amp P that it would be unable to supply incremental blocks of firm power because the supply needs of its own retail customers were just barely met 6 SW amp P then began planning for a 300 megawatt thermal power plant in Tracy to be built at a cost of C 45 million 7 The plant was designed to increase the company s peaking capacity to supplement its hydroelectric generation on the Saint Maurice 8 It was slated to burn residual fuel oil a by product of a petrochemical plant to be built in nearby Varennes by a subsidiary Shawinigan Chemicals Limited 9 nbsp Sorel Tracy Company officials raised the issue in November 1959 with the minister of Hydraulic Resources Daniel Johnson whose response was mostly negative The Tracy project and the planned development of a hydroelectric power station on the Upper Saint Maurice at Rapide des Coeurs remained dormant for a while as Quebec was a few months away from a provincial election 8 The new Premier Jean Lesage approved the new plant in May 1961 conditional to a commitment to build both the hydroelectric generating station at Rapide des Coeurs 10 and the petrochemical plant in Varennes 11 The construction of the generating station and the petrochemical plant were announced on July 31 12 Work on the first phase of the Tracy plant started in March 1962 with United Engineers and Constructors of Philadelphia as the lead contractor 13 The work site employed 800 people 14 The first two units were completed after Hydro Quebec s hostile takeover of SW amp P and every other investor owned public utility in the province as part of Quebec s nationalization of electricity policy 11 Shortly after the 1963 buyout Hydro ordered a second set of two units to be built next to the first two 15 and gave the construction contract to Shawinigan Engineering Work started in March 1965 and the last unit was delivered in February 1968 13 In a booklet published by the public relations branch of Hydro Quebec in August 1965 shortly after the commissioning of the second unit the utility explains its decision to upgrade the plant by the urgent need to ensure extra capacity now and the advisability of creating an adequate reserve for future operations adding that the role of the plant would change over its operating life 15 Cheaper to build than a hydroelectric power station and located closer to the major load centres the plant could be used as spare capacity to supply peak hour energy to the system supplement hydro production in low water years and could come on line during power outages or act as synchronous condensers providing reactive power to control the voltage on the grid 16 Transition between the former and the new owner during construction hit a few snags The first two units are separated from the two units ordered by Hydro Quebec by a wall because SW amp P bond holders required the assets of the new subsidiary to remain distinct from those of its new parent company 17 Technical overview editSee also Thermal power station nbsp The generating station s four smokestacks nbsp The fuel storage tanks nbsp The high voltage terminal station next to the plant Thermal power plants play a marginal role in Hydro Quebec s system which is dominated by hydropower In 2009 non nuclear thermal generation accounted for 4 4 of nameplate capacity but only generated 446 GWh 0 3 of total energy production 18 More expensive to run and more polluting than hydroelectric power plants thermal plants are used to generate power during peak conditions but most of the company s thermal plants serve remote communities not connected to the main power grid in Nunavik on the Lower North Shore in Haute Mauricie and in the Magdalen Islands 19 A thermal power station such as Tracy converts the energy contained in heavy fuel oil into heat motion and then into electrical energy Burning fuel vaporize water and the steam expands to drive a turbine that spins the rotor of an alternator to generate electricity Condensing water is then reused for another cycle 20 In the process water is preheated six times raising its temperature from 27 C 80 F to 238 C 460 F and goes through a deaerator and an economizer before entering the boiler at a temperature of 340 5 C 645 F close to the boiling point under pressure 21 Each boiler is 12 m 40 ft long and 9 m 30 ft wide at its base and rises to 55 m 180 ft the equivalent of a 13 floor building 22 At the top a 16 m 50 ft long steam drum separates water and saturated steam The boiler is heated by 16 burners four in each corner which can be retracted and tilted to control the steam temperature 23 The steam becomes an ideal gas at 539 4 C 1 003 F 24 25 and a pressure of 12 75 MPa 1 850 PSI after being forced into the superheater 24 The plant boilers have been designed to be converted to coal in the event that it became a cheaper solution Spaces for storing and handling coal were set aside in the planning phase 26 At its rated power the plant burned 159 000 litres 1 000 barrels of heavy fuel oil per hour 25 27 Ten 200 000 barrel fuel storage tanks are located behind the plant 28 and were supplied with fuel from the Montreal and Levis refineries by tanker 29 or by rail 30 Each unit was designed to hot start within 20 or 30 minutes A cold start can take between three and four hours It is a delicate operation since moving parts must be relatively uniformly warmed to prevent damage 31 The success of this operation involves more than 70 steps and is controlled by a sequence monitoring system to avoid missteps Cooling off a unit after use required precautions to prevent buckling of the main shaft 32 The plant was easily recognizable by its four 137 metre 449 ft high red and white smokestacks 29 Framed with safety valves the chimneys were only 82 m 270 ft tall when the plant opened in the 1960s 15 but were raised in 1980 in response to environmental considerations 13 The plant s maximum annual output was limited to 2 6 TWh due to air pollution regulations 33 The transmission towers near the plant is part of a 735 kV transmission line crossing the Saint Lawrence River They are 174 6 m 573 ft high making them the tallest in Canada 34 The power station s terminal substation is linked to the power grid by four 230 kV lines to Boucherville Varennes Contrecoeur Carignan lines 2320 and 2322 and Sorel Tracy lines 2332 and 2336 4 35 Operation edit nbsp The plant s main gate The Tracy Thermal Generating Station was one of four peaking power plants on the Hydro Quebec grid It was primarily used in winter to boost capacity as required by the widespread use of electric heating and poor home insulation in Quebec It was also sporadically operated as a base load power plant between 1989 and 1991 in 1998 and in 2003 2004 36 to mitigate low water conditions in the company s reservoirs Since the 1980s calls for the closure of the plant were heard each time it was run for an extended period 37 38 Nearby residents mainly complained about noise and odours from the generating station 33 In December 1990 Quebec s Minister of Energy Lise Bacon asked Hydro Quebec to consider converting the plant to natural gas to lower sulfur dioxide emissions as well as a cost saving measure at the time heavy fuel oil was sold at C28 barrel while the equivalent natural gas was selling for C 18 39 In 1992 Hydro Quebec announced a C 300 million refurbishment program to upgrade the boilers to burn natural gas or heavy fuel oil by 1995 40 The plant was seldom used between 1992 and 1997 and the modernization program was scaled down from C 165 to C 130 million Retiring the plant was considered as a cost cutting measure in the summer of 1996 Hydro Quebec decided against shutting down the plant but temporarily closed two units 41 Natural gas conversion was also shelved as it was not beneficial at the moment 42 Extended operation periods edit nbsp The plant was operated extensively between June 2003 and May 2004 because of a serious precipitation shortfall Hydro Quebec restarted the plant during the massive ice storm of January 1998 43 In July the utility signed a one year contract with the Ultramar refinery in Levis for heavy fuel oil deliveries at C13 per barrel a price never seen before according to the company s CEO Andre Caille 30 Despite denials by Hydro Quebec officials the operation of the Tracy plant was seen by many observers as evidence of low reservoir levels 30 44 A few months later the company was forced to admit levels of its reservoirs were low 45 46 After being idle for two years to complete repairs the plant was run at capacity for 5 weeks from June 14 to July 23 2001 to take advantage of high prices on neighbouring electricity markets and cheap fuel 47 and generated close to 200 GWh 36 That summer Hydro Quebec took delivery of 480 000 barrels of heavy oil and a 270 000 barrel load in August When operating at full capacity the plant consumed 20 000 bpd 47 The plant s units were put back to service in mid June 2003 in response to a further decline in reservoir levels after two years of improvement 48 In October Le Devoir newspaper reported that three strategic reservoirs Manic 5 LG 2 and Caniapiscau reached levels described as alarming as of May 2003 49 With a runoff deficit reaching 23 TWh the Tracy generating station ran for 11 months out of 12 in 2003 The plant had a record year generating 1 75 TWh beating its previous best year in 1990 50 The very cold temperatures recorded in mid January 2004 increased domestic demand to record levels and added to the supply problems even as the thermal plant was kept running at full capacity In four days Hydro Quebec broke its historical peak demand four times twice on January 15 while Montreal was freezing under 30 C 22 F weather On that day system demand reached 35 818 MW at 7 18 am and climbed to 36 279 MW at 5 30 pm 51 The year round use of the thermal power station fostered a strong discontent among people living nearby who began registering complaints with the company and their elected officials During the summer of 2003 a few people s houses and property were soiled with mysterious reddish droplets for which Hydro Quebec paid compensation recognizing that these droplets could be related to possible releases from the power plant 52 After meeting a delegation of Sorel Tracy citizens led by mayor Marcel Robert on March 29 2004 company officials pledged to stop operating the plant past May 31 2004 and limit its future use to peak periods only 53 The decision met both Quebec s 54 and regional authorities demands including the preservation of local jobs 55 Environment editSee also Air pollution Climate change Acid rain and Smog The Tracy generating station was the only major thermal power station owned by Hydro Quebec on the main power grid in 2011 except for three gas turbines in Becancour La Citiere and Cadillac 56 and it was the utility s main source of air pollutants for most of its operational life 57 During the last 30 years of its operational life the Tracy thermal generating station was faced with increasingly more stringent environmental rules The Canada US Agreements on acid rain 37 new regulations lowering the sulfur content of fuel and greenhouse gas emissions regulations gradually constrained its operational flexibility outside of peak hours The power station was operated 4 500 hours in 2003 58 and emitted 11 316 tonnes of SO2 and 6 284 tonnes of NOx 59 which was above the 5 000 tonne cap for the southern Quebec Pollutant Emission Management Area PEMA under the 2000 Ozone Annex of the bilateral Air Quality Agreement 60 In 2004 the power station released 1 2 megatonnes of CO2 61 6 674 tonnes of SO2 and 4 010 tonnes of NOx 59 That year the Tracy plant operated for 2 355 hours Emissions were significantly cut in later years as it ran for 373 hours in 2005 58 down to only 7 hours in 2010 62 The Quebec government climate change action plan increased the costs of keeping the plant open Starting in 2007 the plant s share of the C 200 million carbon levy for industrial users of fossil fuels was evaluated at C 4 5 million 63 A new air quality regulation passed in 2011 lowered the NOx cap to 2 100 tonnes per year 64 and required the power station to be equipped with a selective catalytic reduction system a C 75 million investment according to a 2010 economic assessment prepared by the Quebec Department of Sustainable Development Environment and Wildlife 65 Retirement and dismantlement edit nbsp Decommissioning work at the plant has been delayed following the bankruptcy of EDS Canada in December 2013 nbsp The plant without its smokestacks during its dismantlement in March 2015 With the commissioning of new dams in the James Bay area the Tracy plant ceased operations prior to the 2010 2011 winter to be kept as a reserve 66 67 It was officially retired on March 1 2011 68 Dismantlement work is scheduled to begin in January 2013 and will last approximately one year 62 The C 19 million 12 million contract was awarded to US based firm EDS Decommissioning a subsidiary of the Silverdell Environmental Group EDS will be in charge of decommissioning and dismantling the plant including asbestos removal tearing down the structures and selling reusable assets The contractor expects to market approximately 37 000 tonnes of reusable plant equipment and metals for resale 69 Future use of the riverfront property owned by Hydro Quebec has not yet been finalized At the end of 2011 the Societe des traversiers du Quebec expressed an interest in moving its Sorel ferry terminal at Bassin Kaskiaik to near the power station as a way to increase traffic 70 As of October 2012 this scenario is among five options evaluated by a consultant retained by the Quebec government 71 See also edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp Energy portalList of electrical generating stations in Quebec Shawinigan Water amp Power CompanyReferences edit Christopher Bergesen December 8 2012 Steam Electric Plants in Canada other fuels Power Plants Around the World Bethesda MD Archived from the original on July 19 2009 Retrieved January 19 2013 Societe historique Pierre de Saurel 2003 Histoire de Sorel et Tracy Ville de Sorel Tracy in French Retrieved June 3 2014 Grogne contre les hausses de taxes dans le secteur Tracy Radio Canada Nouvelles in French CBC Radio Canada July 27 2011 Retrieved January 12 2013 a b Paradis 1965 p 2 Bolduc Hogue amp Larouche 1989 p 137 142 Bellavance 1994 p 196 197 Bellavance 1994 p 189 a b Bellavance 1994 p 190 Bellavance 1994 p 189 263 Hydro Quebec built a 76 MW run of the river hydroelectric power station at Rapide des Coeurs in the 2000s a b Bellavance 1994 p 191 McKenzie Bob August 1 1961 65 Million Development Boost To Quebec Industry Power Petrochemical Plants Announced By Shawinigan The Gazette Montreal p 1 Retrieved January 14 2013 a b c Beliveau Isabelle April 27 2004 La construction de la Centrale thermique de Tracy Les 2 Rives La Voix in French Sorel Tracy Archived from the original on June 5 2014 Retrieved January 10 2013 Thibault Bertrand August 1 1961 Bientot une grosse nouvelle au sujet d une siderurgie au Quebec M Lesage L Action catholique in French Quebec City p 1 Retrieved January 17 2013 a b c Paradis 1965 p 4 Paradis 1965 p 6 8 Bolduc Hogue amp Larouche 1989 p 184 185 Hydro Quebec 2010 p 37 Hydro Quebec Wind Power and Other Sources of Energy Fossil fuels Understanding Electricity Retrieved January 20 2013 Paradis 1965 p 10 Paradis 1965 p 12 Paradis 1965 p 13 Paradis 1965 p 22 a b Paradis 1965 p 14 a b Fortin Richard August 15 1989 Un tuyau eclate et la centrale de Tracy ne redemarre pas La Presse in French Montreal p A3 Paradis 1965 p 22 24 Paradis 1965 p 24 Paradis 1965 p 6 a b Hydro Quebec 2009 Centrale de Tracy in French Archived from the original on May 3 2009 a b c Asselin Pierre Baril Helene July 29 1998 Ultramar alimentera la centrale de Tracy Le Soleil in French Quebec City p A12 Paradis 1965 p 26 Paradis 1965 p 28 a b Baril Helene March 31 2004 Hydro stoppe la production de la centrale de Tracy La Presse in French Montreal p Business 1 Hydro Quebec Power Transmission Towers Understanding Electricity Retrieved January 10 2013 Carte des installations de transport d energie au Quebec Map of electric transmission infrastructure in Quebec PDF Map Hydro Quebec TransEnergie 2006 Retrieved January 12 2013 a b Hydro Quebec Production March 19 2004 Reponses d Hydro Quebec Production a la demande de renseignements no 1 de la Regie Docket R 3526 2004 PDF in French Regie de l energie p 32 Retrieved January 10 2013 a b Venne Michel November 29 1989 Hydro accusee d augmenter les pluies acides La Presse in French Montreal p C9 Cote Charles March 3 2004 Utilisee a plein regime la centrale de Tracy pollue La Presse in French Montreal p A13 Le Cours Rudy January 22 1991 La centrale de Tracy devrait fonctionner encore cet ete La Presse in French Montreal p D4 La Presse Canadienne April 9 1992 Hydro modernise sa centrale de Tracy Le Soleil in French Quebec City p B3 Binsse Lisa January 15 1997 La centrale de Tracy reste ouverte La Presse in French Montreal p D5 Binsse Lisa November 13 1997 Le thermique n est pas une option rentable La Presse in French Montreal p E1 Dutrisac Robert Myles Brian July 28 1998 Hydro ne craint pas la penurie En cas de probleme la societe d Etat peut reduire ses exportations Le Devoir in French Montreal p A1 Tison Marie July 24 1998 Le cout du mazout incite Hydro Quebec a rouvrir la centrale de Tracy Le Nouvelliste in French Trois Rivieres p 5 Francoeur Louis Gilles December 3 1998 Reserves d eau Hydro envisage le pire La societe d Etat se dit confiante de faire face meme au scenario extreme Le Devoir in French Montreal p A1 Low reservoirs prompt utility to reopen plant CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation November 13 1998 Retrieved June 3 2014 a b Binsse Lisa August 16 2001 Tracy reprend du service La Presse in French Montreal p D1 Baril Helene July 17 2003 En plein ete Hydro doit user sa centrale au mazout La Presse in French Montreal p D1 Francoeur Louis Gilles October 14 2003 Hydro pousse la centrale thermique de Tracy au maximum La recherche de profits provoque aussi une baisse des niveaux d eau des grands barrages Le Devoir in French Montreal p A1 Retrieved January 11 2013 Baril Helene March 24 2004 La centrale de Tracy a battu des records de production en 2003 La Presse in French Montreal p Business 1 Duchesne Andre January 16 2004 La vague de froid et Hydro Quebec Quatrieme record en quatre jours La Presse in French Montreal p A8 Cote Charles March 3 2004 Utilisee a plein regime la centrale de Tracy pollue La Presse in French Montreal p A13 Baril Helene March 31 2004 Hydro stoppe la production de la centrale de Tracy La Presse in French Montreal p Business 1 Gouvernement du Quebec June 29 2004 Centrale de cogeneration de Becancour par TransCanada Energy Ltd Dossier 3211 12 75 PDF in French Ministere du Developpement durable de l Environnement et des Parcs du Quebec p 11 Retrieved May 14 2009 Ville de Sorel Tracy March 29 2004 La centrale thermique de Sorel Tracy retrouvera sa vocation de centrale d appoint in French Retrieved May 14 2009 Hydro Quebec 2012 p 114 Gouvernement du Quebec January 2006 Inventaire quebecois des emissions de gaz a effet de serre en 2003 et evolution depuis 1990 in French Ministere du Developpement durable de l Environnement et des Parcs du Quebec Retrieved January 13 2013 a b La Presse Canadienne May 27 2006 Le Quebec a reduit ses emissions de GES en 2004 Le Devoir in French Montreal p A8 Retrieved January 9 2013 a b Canada October 11 2013 Facility amp Substance Information for Hydro Quebec Centrale de Tracy National Pollutant Release Inventory Environment Canada Retrieved June 3 2014 Canada 2006 Canada United States Air Quality Agreement 2006 Progress Report PDF Ottawa Environment Canada p 13 ISBN 0 662 44080 3 Canada Facility and GHG emissions Facility information year 2004 Environment Canada Retrieved June 3 2014 a b Lambert Julie January 9 2013 Sorel Tracy Demolition de la centrale thermique d Hydro Quebec Le Journal de Montreal in French Retrieved January 9 2013 Quebec passe le chapeau Radio Canada Nouvelles in French CBC Radio Canada June 6 2007 Retrieved January 11 2013 Section 66 of the Clean Air Regulation 2011 R S Q c Q 2 r 4 1 specifically targets the Tracy power station MDDEP 2010 p 13 TVA Nouvelles November 10 2010 Coup dur pour Sorel Tracy Hydro va fermer sa centrale Argent in French Archived from the original on May 31 2014 Retrieved June 3 2014 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Baril Helene November 10 2010 Centrale de Sorel Tracy Hydro stoppe les moteurs La Presse in French Montreal Retrieved January 15 2013 Gregoire Racicot Louise November 4 2011 Sorel Tracy Hydro Quebec ferme la centrale thermique La Voix in French Sorel Tracy Quebec Archived from the original on March 18 2014 Retrieved January 15 2013 Silverdell wins Canadian power plant decommissioning The Construction Index January 14 2013 Retrieved January 14 2013 Gregoire Racicot Louise December 11 2011 Demenagement possible de la traverse a la hauteur de la centrale thermique Les 2 Rives et La Voix in French Sorel Tracy Retrieved January 10 2013 Bellemare Pierre October 8 2012 Pas de resultat avant janvier pour la traverse L Action d Autray in French Joliette Archived from the original on November 13 2012 Retrieved January 16 2013 Works cited editBellavance Claude 1994 Shawinigan Water and Power 1898 1963 Formation et declin d un groupe industriel au Quebec Shawinigan Water and Power 1898 1963 Formation and decline of an industrial group in Quebec in French Montreal Boreal 446 p ISBN 2 89052 586 4 Bolduc Andre Hogue Clarence Larouche Daniel 1989 Hydro Quebec l heritage d un siecle d electricite in French third ed Montreal Libre Expression Forces 341 p ISBN 2 89111 388 8 also available in English under the title Hydro Quebec After 100 Years of Electricity Government of Quebec May 13 2010 Reglement sur l assainissement de l atmoshpere Etude d impact economique Clean Air Regulation Economic impact study PDF in French Quebec City Ministere du Developpement durable de l Environnement et de la Faune 60 p Retrieved January 18 2013 Hydro Quebec 2010 Sustainability Report 2009 PDF Montreal Hydro Quebec 44 p ISBN 978 2 550 58105 5 Retrieved January 18 2013 Hydro Quebec 2012 Annual Report 2011 PDF Montreal Hydro Quebec 116 p ISBN 978 2 550 63872 8 ISSN 0702 6706 Retrieved March 28 2012 Paradis Paul 1965 Tracy Thermal Generating Station Montreal Hydro Quebec 32 p OCLC 77448028 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tracy Generating Station Thermal power plants on Hydro Quebec s website National Pollutant Release Inventory data on the Tracy thermal generating station Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tracy Thermal Generating Station amp oldid 1201956768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.