How Combined Heat and Power Works
Combined Heat and Power (CHP) systems optimize energy
dollars by utilizing the heat normally lost during
centralized production of electricity to provide thermal
energy for space heating, cooling, steam and hot water. It
does this through the integration of a power system (such
as an engine or turbine) and a heat recovery system (usually
a boiler), located on or near the user’s facility.




This example compares
electric generation from a large power plant (source) to
an individual CHP plant (site)
A CHP system achieves
an efficiency of 85% compared to a separate heat and
power system efficiency of only 45%. By capturing the
“waste” heat from power generation, CHP delivers total
system efficiencies of 75% to 85%.