Peaker plants are generally
gas turbines or
gas engines that burn
natural gas. A few burn
biogas or
petroleum-derived liquids, such as
diesel oil and
jet fuel, but those are generally more expensive than natural gas, so their use is limited to areas not supplied with natural gas. In addition to natural gas, many peaker plants are able to use petroleum as a backup fuel, storing oil in tanks on site. The
thermodynamic efficiency of simple-cycle gas turbine power plants ranges from 20 to 42%, with between 30 and 42% being average for a new plant. For greater efficiency, a
heat recovery steam generator (HRSG) is added at the exhaust. This is known as a
combined cycle plant.
Cogeneration uses waste exhaust heat for process,
district heating or other heating uses. Both of these options are used only in plants that are intended to be operated for longer periods than usual. Natural gas and
diesel generators with
reciprocating engines are sometimes used for
grid support using smaller plants. Another option for increased efficiency and power output in gas turbines is installing a
turbine inlet air cooling system, that cools down the inlet air temperature increasing mass flow ratio. This option, in combination with a
thermal energy storage tank, can increase the turbine power output in on-peak periods up to 30%. Daily peak load with large hydro/base load thermal generation and intermittent wind power. Hydro is managing the peaks, with some response from thermal. Hydroelectric dams are intentionally variable. They can generate less during off-peak and quickly respond to peak demands, consequently
hydroelectricity may function as load following or a peaking plant and with sufficient water, a base-load plant. Natural gas turbines or
pumped storage are often used where there is not enough hydroelectricity to respond to daily and weekly variations in generation and consumption. It is not unusual for a dam to be built with more capacity than can be sustained by the water supply, allowing for a higher peak output. Upgrading equipment at existing dams can be one of the least expensive ways of increasing peak generation. The ability to vary the amount of electricity generated is often limited by the requirement that minimum or maximum flows downstream are satisfied.
Pumped-storage hydroelectricity is the largest-capacity form of grid energy storage available, used for averaging off-peak and peak electrical demands. The site stores energy using the gravitational potential of water stored in a reservoir. Low-cost off-peak electric power from base load or intermittent sources is used to pump water at a low elevation to storage in a high elevation reservoir. During periods of high electrical demand, the stored water is released through turbines to produce electric power. Start up times are only a few minutes, and some can start in a few tens of seconds.
Batteries are used in some cases where conditions favor it to smooth flow, avoiding a costly power line upgrade, as well as supplying peak power and other
grid services such as
operating reserve, sometimes in
hybrid configuration with turbines or diesel engines. Battery power is by far the fastest responding of all powerplants, and can respond to grid conditions at millisecond timescales, giving slower responding equipment a chance to react to outages. Pumped-storage and batteries are net consumers, as they have no inherent energy source, and the conversion between electricity and storage and back incurs some losses. Solar thermal peaker plants were proposed in 2017, under a US Department of Energy Technology 2 Market award to Hank Price of SolarDynamics, whose paper "Dispatchable Solar Power Plant" proposed utilizing the thermal energy storage inherent in a
solar thermal energy power plant, that enables this heat-based form of solar to generate like a gas peaker, to supply power on demand day or night, and in return be controlled by the utility and paid in capacity payments to be available when needed, like a traditional peaker plant. A solar thermal power plant makes electricity in a steam cycle power plant like a traditional power plant but the heat for steam is supplied by solar energy heating a material such as molten salts and storing the heat until needed to make steam for power generation. ==Base load power plants==