A rising demand for natural gas puts pressure on supply, and greater deployment of high-efficiency combined heat and power energy (CHP) systems could mitigate recent and projected natural gas price increases and consequent economic impacts, according to the U.S. Combined Heat and Power Association (USCHPA). However, the organization also said that CHP faces policy barriers.
CHP systems generate electricity and thermal energy simultaneously from a single fuel combustion process. In contrast to typical large conventional gas-burning electric power plants that average 33 percent generation efficiency, CHP systems are 60 percent to 80 percent efficient. USCHPA says this is more efficient than most modern gas-fitted power plants, which produce electricity alone, and avoid the transmission line losses that can cost the centralized electric system an additional 9 percent of generated power.