Natural Gas Generator Sets and Distributed Energy: Core Overview
Natural gas distributed energy is a highly efficient energy supply system that uses natural gas as fuel to simultaneously produce electricity, heat, cooling, and other energy forms at or near the point of use. Its core principle lies in the cascade utilization of energy: electricity is first generated by a gas-powered generator set, and then the waste heat produced during power generation is recovered for heating, cooling, or steam supply. This increases the comprehensive utilization rate of primary energy from around 40% in conventional methods to over 80%.
Core Equipment: Generator Set Comparison
Core Advantages and Value
-
High Efficiency & Energy Saving: Comprehensive energy utilization rate exceeds 80%, far surpassing traditional separated supply methods.
-
Economical & Reliable: Proximity to users reduces transmission/distribution losses and costs; can serve as emergency backup power for critical facilities.
-
Clean & Low-Carbon: Reduces carbon emissions by approximately 57% compared to coal, with very low pollutant emissions.
-
Flexible Operation: Offers flexible operation modes (grid-connected or island mode) and can effectively balance the intermittency of renewable sources like wind and solar.
Primary Application Scenarios
-
Regional Energy Supply: Provides reliable electricity, heating, and cooling for business parks, hospitals, data centers, airports, etc.
-
Industrial Energy Supply: Supplies both electricity and process steam/heat for factories.
-
Building Energy Systems: Serves as the highly efficient core energy system for large commercial complexes.
Natural gas distributed energy is a key, high-efficiency solution for building modern smart energy systems, achieving cost reduction, efficiency improvement, and green, low-carbon development.