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Availability Factor Information

The availability factor of a power plant is the amount of time that it is able to produce electricity over a certain period, divided by the amount of the time in the period. Occasions where only partial capacity is available may or may not be deducted. The availability factor should not be confused with the capacity factor.

The availability of a power plant varies greatly depending on the type of fuel, the design of the plant and how the plant is operated. Everything else being equal, plants that are run less frequently have higher availability factors because they require less maintenance. Most thermal power stations, such as coal, geothermal and nuclear power plants, have availability factors between 70% and 90%. Newer plants tend to have significantly higher availability factors, but preventive maintenance is as important as improvements in design and technology. Gas turbines have relatively high availability factors, ranging from 80% to 99%. Gas turbines are commonly used for peaking power plants, co-generation plants and the first stage of combined cycle plants.

The availability factor of wind and solar power plants depends on whether periods when the plant is operational, but there is no wind or sunlight, are counted as available, unavailable or disregarded. If they are counted as available during these times, photovoltaic plants have an availability factor approaching or equal to 100%. Modern wind turbines also have very high availability factors, about 98%. However, solar and wind plants have relatively low capacity factors. In the wiki on capacity factors you can see that wind capacity factors range from 20-40% and solar capacity factors in Arizona are about 19%. This makes wind and solar availability factors much lower if times when sunlight or wind are not available are taken into account.

References

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See also

· · Electricity generation
Concepts Availability factor · Baseload · Black start · Capacity factor · Demand factor · Demand management · EROEI · Grid storage · Intermittency · Load following · Nameplate capacity · Peak demand · Repowering · Spark spread
Sources
Nonrenewable Coal · Fossil fuel power plant · Natural gas · Petroleum · Nuclear · Oil shale
Renewable Biomass · Geothermal · Hydro · Marine · Solar · Wind
Technology AC power · Cogeneration · Combined cycle · Cooling tower · Induction generator · Micro CHP · Microgeneration · Rankine cycle · Three-phase electric power · Virtual power plant
Distribution Demand response · Distributed generation · Dynamic demand · Electricity distribution · Electrical grid · High-voltage direct current · Load management · Pumped hydro · Negawatts · Smart grid · Substation · Super grid · TSO · Transmission tower · Utility pole
Policies Carbon offset · Coal phase out · Ecotax · Energy subsidies · Feed-in tariff · Net metering · Pigovian tax · Renewable Energy Certificates · Renewable energy payments · Renewable energy policy
Categories: Electric power distribution · Electricity economics · Power station technology · Portals: Energy · Sustainable development

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