Power
The Kiewit team was awarded the contract to construct and install the spray dryer absorber to the 400-megawatt coal-fired power plant. As part of the plant expansion, the client also upgraded emission controls on Units 1 and 2. The result will be the combined emissions from all four units will be less than the original two units.
The Neal Energy Center Environmental Retrofit Project consists of the installation of two dry scrubber spray dryer absorbers and two pulse jet fabric filters each for Unit 3 (515 MW nominal) and Unit 4 (644 MW nominal) of the plant.
The Louisa Scrubber and Baghouse Project, the frst project of its kind for Kiewit, provided a fully integrated air quality control system facility for the Louisa Generating Station. The short completion schedule set forth by the owner required a disciplined coordination effort among the team to fnish on time. The project has since served as a benchmark for quality and owner satisfaction for similar projects.
The La Cygne Generating Station Environmental Retrofit Project includes the installation of two Hitachi wet FGD scrubbers and new fabric filters on Unit 1 and Unit 2; and a selective catalytic reduction (SCR) system, low- NOx burners and over-fire air system on Unit 2 of the facility.
A Kiewit-led joint venture was awarded the contract to engineer, procure, construct, startup and test a 660-megawatt coal-fired power plant. The new plant at Nebraska City more than doubles the current power output at the original facility that was built in the 1970s.
The Kiewit team was awarded the contract to construct a portion of the new 900-megawatt coal-fired power plant and a portion of upgrades to the existing Unit 1.
A Kiewit-led joint venture was awarded the contract for the detailed design, procurement, construction, startup and testing of the dry lime flue gas desulfurization system and baghouse addition to an existing 690-megawatt coal-fired power plant. This retrofit is projected to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by 67 percent and improve the plant's efficiency by 2.75 percent.
The team of Kiewit and Black & Veatch was awarded the contract to engineer, procure and construct the 200-megawatt coal-fired unit at the existing Dallman facility.



