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Image courtesy of the New York Power Authority
Image courtesy of the New York Power Authority

New York Power Authority approves 5-year $38 million contract to build new gantry crane at flagship Niagara Power Project

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Mon, Aug 1st 2022 11:00 am

New 680-ton crane to support $1.1 billion, 15-year ‘Next Generation Niagara’ project to digitize and extend operating life of state’s largest hydropower plant

√ View a short video about the new crane; see a rendering of the new crane on order or
photos of the plant

The New York Power Authority board of trustees on Tuesday approved the award of a competitively bid contract, valued up to $37,984,000, to REEL COH Inc. of Boisbriand, Canada, to fabricate, deliver and install a new gantry crane with a lifting capacity of 680 tons for the Power Authority’s Niagara Power Project in Lewiston.

A press release said, “The new crane is critical tool that will help enable the power project’s 15-year modernization and digitization program titled ‘Next Generation Niagara’ (NGN), and support NYPA’s leadership role in advancing the bold climate action goals as outlined in the state’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act.

NYPA Interim President and CEO Justin E. Driscoll said, “The Niagara Power Project’s overhead gantry crane is the workhorse that makes possible all the of the plant’s mechanical upgrades, especially those related to our $1.1 billion, multiyear ‘Next Generation Niagara’ effort to modernize and extend the life of New York’s flagship clean energy plant. Many of the efforts to digitize the project are already underway, but a new crane is essential for planned major mechanical upgrades. We are pleased to have REEL COH help us achieve our bold goal to modernize and digitize our foundational hydroelectric plant, so we can continue to consistently provide clean energy to our customers and New Yorkers across the state.”

Launched in 2019, “Next Generation Niagara” is designed to extend the operating life of the Niagara Power Project, the largest source of clean electricity in New York, and one of the country's largest hydroelectric projects. “Next Generation Niagara” is focusing primarily on the 13 power generating units that make up the project's Robert Moses Niagara Power Plant.

Standing 70 feet high and 60 feet wide, the project’s bright red overhead crane (dubbed “Big Red” by plant staff) rolls along rail tracks at the project’s main generating facility, lifting rotors and other major components for maintenance and repairs. It is original to the plant and is nearing the end of its useful life. NYPA said, “The new crane will play an integral role in NGN and will be rated to carry loads 50 tons greater than its predecessor.”

It explained the NGN program improvements include replacing aging equipment with the latest machinery that reflects advanced digital technologies for optimizing the hydroelectric project's performance. In addition to the crane replacement, which enables the disassembly and reassembly of the generating units, “Next Generation Niagara” encompasses three other projects: 1) Design and implementation of an inspection platform to conduct comprehensive inspections of the Robert Moses Plant's penstocks – the 485-foot conduits that are 26 feet in diameter along the face of the project that carry water from the forebay to the turbine generators; 2) upgrading and digitizing control systems and building a new back-up control room; and 3) overhaul and/or replacement of mechanical components that have reached the end of their operating life, for which the new crane will play an integral role.

The scope of work under this contract includes the design, fabrication, delivery and installation of the new crane with a lift capacity of 680 tons, as well as a 15-ton monorail hoist, a five-ton maintenance hoist, bird deterrent systems and closed-circuit television (CCTV) systems.

Construction of the new crane is expected be complete by 2026.

It was determined REEL COH was the best value bidder based on its competitive pricing, experience, and its submission of a well-thought-out project execution plan.

The first turbine outage to update the plant’s mechanical components is scheduled to begin in April 2023.

About the Niagara Power Project

Following the collapse of Niagara Mohawk's Schoellkopf Power Station in 1956 and the elimination of tens of thousands of jobs in the Niagara Region and nearly 25% of the city's tax base, the Federal Power Commission issued a license in 1957 to the New York Power Authority to redevelop Niagara Falls' hydroelectric power. The Power Authority employed 11,700 workers and within three years, 12 million cubic yards of rock were excavated. The herculean effort led to the construction of a massive main structure that is 1,840 feet long, 580 feet wide and 384 feet high. When the Niagara Power Project produced its first power in 1961, it was the largest hydropower facility in the Western world and President John F. Kennedy called it "an example to the world of North American efficiency and determination." After 60 years of operation and successful obtainment of a new 50-year federal operating license in 2007, the Niagara Power Project remains the crown jewel and flagship foundation of New York's power infrastructure and growing clean energy economy.

NYPA is the largest state public power organization in the nation, operating 16 generating facilities and more than 1,400 circuit-miles of transmission lines. More than 80% of the electricity NYPA produces is clean, renewable hydropower. NYPA uses no tax money or state credit. It finances its operations through the sale of bonds and revenues earned in large part through sales of electricity. For more information, visit www.nypa.gov.

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