Committed to Environmental Stewardship, Tillamook County Creamery Association Chooses Electric Boilers

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Screenshot 2023 02 01 at 8.50.48 AMTillamook County Creamery Association (TCAA), a farmer-owned cooperative based in Tillamook, Ore., has been providing high quality dairy products for more than a century. Tillamook® produces internationally recognized, award-winning cheese as well as exceptional ice cream, butter, cream cheese spreads, yogurt and sour cream.

Tillamook is recognized as a Certified B Corporation®(B Corp™), which means it meets the highest standards of social and environmental performance, transparency and accountability. Stewardship has always been a core value of Tillamook, and in recent years, company management strengthened its sustainability commitment in all areas of the business, including the boiler room. B Corp reflects how Tillamook values environmental, social and governance metrics just as much as other business metrics.

Background

Prior to 2009, Tillamook operated two 700-hp firetube boilers that burned No. 2 oil. Driven by environmental and other reasons, management wanted to replace its oil-firing boiler with an electric one. The Creamery visitors center is locally served by the Tillamook People’s Utility District (PUD), and at the time, PUD’s distribution voltage was 25kV. Cleaver-Brooks is one of the only electrode boiler manufacturers in the world that can accept 25kV without transformation to a lower voltage. Eliminating a transformer of this size substantially reduced the cost of the overall project and simplified the installation.

Installation

The boiler model Tillamook selected was a Cleaver-Brooks 5.3MW-25kV. The pre-assembly and wiring done at the factory enabled boiler start-up to be completed in only six days, minimizing onsite work and erection costs.

Screenshot 2023 02 01 at 8.50.37 AMBenefits

According to Tillamook management, the Cleaver-Brooks electric boiler paid for itself in less than two years. Tillamook has continued to grow steadily with small step-function changes along the way, while honoring an agreement with PUD to limit electric power usage during busy times. To make up for the reduced capacity during these times, the facility runs fossil fuel boilers on propane or diesel.

Conclusion

In 2020, Cole Industrial, headquartered in Lynnwood, Wash., expanded the capacity of Tillamook’s boiler system from 5.3 MW of peak power to 6 MW in an effort to shift even more steam production from diesel/propane to electrical energy. This project was driven by a combination of cost savings and decreasing emissions.In addition, since installing the electric boiler, Tillamook has reduced its diesel consumption along with corresponding emissions by 80% overall.

Written by Michael Colombo, Business Development Manager, in partnership with Tillamook