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{{#Wiki_filter:United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission Official Hearing Exhibit In the Matter of
{{#Wiki_filter:NYS000122 United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission Official Hearing Exhibit                   Submitted: December 14, 2011 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.                 EXCERPT In the Matter of:
: Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. (Indian Point Nuclear Generating Units 2 and 3)
(Indian Point Nuclear Generating Units 2 and 3) c.\.~P.R REGlJ~"        ASLBP #: 07-858-03-LR-BD01 P~~"
ASLBP #:07-858-03-LR-BD01 Docket #:05000247 l 05000286 Exhibit #:
Docket #: 05000247 l 05000286 Exhibit #: NYS000122-00-BD01                 Identified: 10/15/2012
Identified:
  ..
Admitted: Withdrawn:
  '"
Rejected: Stricken: Other: NYS000122-00-BD01 10/15/2012 10/15/2012 NYS000122 Submitted: December 14, 2011
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Admitted: 10/15/2012                         Withdrawn:
    ~4:              O~      Rejected:                                      Stricken:
        " ** ** ... ...          Other:
Natural Gas Assessment New York State Energy Plan 2009 December 2009 OAGI0001120_00001


EXCERPT'" 0 I-'!: .. -' r;; " ** ** ...... Natural Gas Assessment New York State Energy Plan 2009 December 2009 OAGI0001120_00001 Natural Gas Assessment Figure 4. New York State Natural Gas Consumption by Sector New York State Natural Gas Consumption by Sector 1999-2008 in TCF 1.4 r*****************************************************  
Natural Gas Assessment Figure 4. New York State Natural Gas Consumption by Sector New York State Natural Gas Consumption by Sector 1999-2008 in TCF 1.4 r***************************************************** ..................................................................................................................................
................................................................................................................................. . 1.2 g, 0.8 u :g U 0.6 0.4 0.2 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Year I III Other 0 Residential f!:ICommercial I:!llndustrial I!:;J Electric Power I Source: EIA Natural Gas Consumption by End Use. 2009. http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/ng/ngconssumdcuSNYa.htm Although the total number of residential and commercial natural gas customers has increased, particularly in the downstate market area, overall statewide gas consumption has remained relatively flat for these sectors. This can be attributed to decreased customer usage due to conservation measures and increased efficiency for new natural gas appliances.
1.2
11 Natural gas use in New York's industrial sector accounts for about 83 billion cubic feet or seven percent of total consumption in the state. Industrial consumption has decreased over the historic period due to both the industrial manufacturing capacity leaving the State and the continued movement away from energy intensive manufacturing processes towards less energy intensive processes.
                ~
New York's industrial sector natural gas use is a much smaller percentage of overall State natural gas demand than that of the national industrial use to total national gas demand. In 2008, the electric generation sector used about 404 billion cubic feet of natural gas or 34 percent of the State's total natural gas consumption.
g,
Consumption of natural gas for electric generation has fluctuated during the historic period 1999 through 2008. Much of this fluctuation can be attributed to economic fuel switching by older, dual-fuel oil/gas steam plants and peak demand weather related variances.
                ~ 0.8 u
Natural gas has become and will continue to be the fuel of choice for new and replacement generation in New York for the next several years due to its economic, operational and environmental advantages.
:g U
In general, natural gas-fired generation plants have lower capital costs, are cleaner burning, are more efficient, and have a greater degree of operational flexibility than other fossil fueled alternatives.
                ~ 0.6
Between 2001 and 2007, approximately 5,000 MW of new natural gas-fired combined cycle and combustion turbine capacity was built in New York. During the same period, about 3,000 MW of older dual-fuel (oil and natural gas) units were retired. About 31 percent of electricity generated in New York was fueled by natural gas in 2007.12 11 Note: historic consumption has not been normalized for weather 12 2007 was latest available EIA generation statistics by energy source. n.ItR)!.w.w.W,.Y.l1UtQ!<$QY!.9.n!<1!ti.!<!!'!.91ri.9.ltY/.!<RH/.g!<D.Y.mt.i.Q!L 9 OAGI0001120_00010}}
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0.4 0.2 1999             2000               2001                 2002               2003               2004                 2005               2006                 2007               2008 Year I III Other 0 Residential f!:ICommercial I:!llndustrial I!:;J Electric Power I Source: EIA Natural Gas Consumption by End Use. 2009. http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/ng/ngconssumdcuSNYa.htm Although the total number of residential and commercial natural gas customers has increased, particularly in the downstate market area, overall statewide gas consumption has remained relatively flat for these sectors. This can be attributed to decreased customer usage due to conservation measures and increased efficiency for new natural gas appliances. 11 Natural gas use in New York's industrial sector accounts for about 83 billion cubic feet or seven percent of total consumption in the state. Industrial consumption has decreased over the historic period due to both the industrial manufacturing capacity leaving the State and the continued movement away from energy intensive manufacturing processes towards less energy intensive processes. New York's industrial sector natural gas use is a much smaller percentage of overall State natural gas demand than that of the national industrial use to total national gas demand.
In 2008, the electric generation sector used about 404 billion cubic feet of natural gas or 34 percent of the State's total natural gas consumption. Consumption of natural gas for electric generation has fluctuated during the historic period 1999 through 2008. Much of this fluctuation can be attributed to economic fuel switching by older, dual-fuel oil/gas steam plants and peak demand weather related variances. Natural gas has become and will continue to be the fuel of choice for new and replacement generation in New York for the next several years due to its economic, operational and environmental advantages. In general, natural gas-fired generation plants have lower capital costs, are cleaner burning, are more energy-efficient, and have a greater degree of operational flexibility than other fossil fueled alternatives.
Between 2001 and 2007, approximately 5,000 MW of new natural gas-fired combined cycle and combustion turbine capacity was built in New York. During the same period, about 3,000 MW of older dual-fuel (oil and natural gas) units were retired. About 31 percent of electricity generated in New York was fueled by natural gas in 2007. 12 11 Note: historic consumption has not been normalized for weather 12   2007 was latest available EIA generation statistics by energy source. n.ItR)!.w.w.W,.Y.l1UtQ!<$QY!.9.n!<1!ti.!<!!'!.91ri.9.ltY/.!<RH/.g!<D.Y.mt.i.Q!L
.~t.~t!<"'~-.l~.
9 OAGI0001120_00010}}

Revision as of 20:34, 11 November 2019

Official Exhibit - NYS000122-00-BD01 - New York State Energy Planning Board, New York State Energy Plan, Natural Gas Assessment (December 2009) Excerpted: P. 9 (2009 NYS Nga)
ML12334A575
Person / Time
Site: Indian Point  Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 12/31/2009
From:
State of NY
To:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
SECY RAS
References
RAS 21538, 50-247-LR, 50-286-LR, ASLBP 07-858-03-LR-BD01
Download: ML12334A575 (2)


Text

NYS000122 United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission Official Hearing Exhibit Submitted: December 14, 2011 Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. EXCERPT In the Matter of:

(Indian Point Nuclear Generating Units 2 and 3) c.\.~P.R REGlJ~" ASLBP #: 07-858-03-LR-BD01 P~~"

Docket #: 05000247 l 05000286 Exhibit #: NYS000122-00-BD01 Identified: 10/15/2012

..

'"

I-

~ -'

~

0'!:

r;;

Admitted: 10/15/2012 Withdrawn:

~4: O~ Rejected: Stricken:

" ** ** ... ... Other:

Natural Gas Assessment New York State Energy Plan 2009 December 2009 OAGI0001120_00001

Natural Gas Assessment Figure 4. New York State Natural Gas Consumption by Sector New York State Natural Gas Consumption by Sector 1999-2008 in TCF 1.4 r***************************************************** ..................................................................................................................................

1.2

~

g,

~ 0.8 u

g U

~ 0.6

~

0.4 0.2 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Year I III Other 0 Residential f!:ICommercial I:!llndustrial I!:;J Electric Power I Source: EIA Natural Gas Consumption by End Use. 2009. http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/ng/ngconssumdcuSNYa.htm Although the total number of residential and commercial natural gas customers has increased, particularly in the downstate market area, overall statewide gas consumption has remained relatively flat for these sectors. This can be attributed to decreased customer usage due to conservation measures and increased efficiency for new natural gas appliances. 11 Natural gas use in New York's industrial sector accounts for about 83 billion cubic feet or seven percent of total consumption in the state. Industrial consumption has decreased over the historic period due to both the industrial manufacturing capacity leaving the State and the continued movement away from energy intensive manufacturing processes towards less energy intensive processes. New York's industrial sector natural gas use is a much smaller percentage of overall State natural gas demand than that of the national industrial use to total national gas demand.

In 2008, the electric generation sector used about 404 billion cubic feet of natural gas or 34 percent of the State's total natural gas consumption. Consumption of natural gas for electric generation has fluctuated during the historic period 1999 through 2008. Much of this fluctuation can be attributed to economic fuel switching by older, dual-fuel oil/gas steam plants and peak demand weather related variances. Natural gas has become and will continue to be the fuel of choice for new and replacement generation in New York for the next several years due to its economic, operational and environmental advantages. In general, natural gas-fired generation plants have lower capital costs, are cleaner burning, are more energy-efficient, and have a greater degree of operational flexibility than other fossil fueled alternatives.

Between 2001 and 2007, approximately 5,000 MW of new natural gas-fired combined cycle and combustion turbine capacity was built in New York. During the same period, about 3,000 MW of older dual-fuel (oil and natural gas) units were retired. About 31 percent of electricity generated in New York was fueled by natural gas in 2007. 12 11 Note: historic consumption has not been normalized for weather 12 2007 was latest available EIA generation statistics by energy source. n.ItR)!.w.w.W,.Y.l1UtQ!<$QY!.9.n!<1!ti.!<!!'!.91ri.9.ltY/.!<RH/.g!<D.Y.mt.i.Q!L

.~t.~t!<"'~-.l~.

9 OAGI0001120_00010