A badly damaged electric generating turbine in Becker, Minn., is turning out to be harder than expected to repair.
Xcel Energy Inc., the Minneapolis-based electric utility that co-owns and operates the massive machine, said Wednesday that it's uncertain when repairs will be finished, though it expects it will be this year.
Part of the problem? One major repair had to be done twice.
The accident on Nov. 19, 2011, at the coal-fired Sherburne County (Sherco) Unit 3 ripped turbine blades off their mountings, hurled twisted shards and other metal out of the machine, bent an 80-ton rotor and triggered a fire. No one was hurt, but the generator — the largest in the state — has been shut down since.
For months, the machine has been spread open like a whale-sized fillet, with engineers crawling around the innards to rebuild it. Last fall, Xcel said it believed the work would be finished in the first quarter of 2013, but that timetable has been scrapped.
"We are dealing with an event that we don't have any precedent for," said Laura McCarten, a regional vice president for Xcel. "This is new territory for us. We don't have real good benchmarks for recovering from an event like this. We are very far along. We learned a lot, but we still have significant work to complete."
Xcel officials submitted a written update on the repairs Tuesday to Minnesota regulators, and elaborated in interviews Wednesday with the Star Tribune.
Plant director Ron Brevig said an analysis of the cause of the accident is still being reviewed by forensic experts, including insurance industry consultants. The findings should be released in the "not-too-distant future," he said.