39.5 MW Natural Gas Fired Combined Cycle (38 MW) + Petroleum Liquids (2 MW) operating in Tompkins, NY — New York Independent System Operator
39.5 MW
Nameplate Capacity
6
Generators
units
Hybrid (2)
Technology
Natural Gas Fired Combined Cycle + Petroleum Liquids
1988
Operating Since
Coordinates
42.4428, -76.4746
County
Tompkins, NY
Nearby Plants
| Field | EIA | GEM | Wikidata |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operator | Cornell University | — | — |
| Owner(s) | Cornell University | — | — |
| Status | Operating | — | — |
The Cornell University Central Heat plant is a 39.5 MW hybrid power plant located in Tompkins County, New York. It began operating in 1988 and is owned and operated by Cornell University. The plant primarily runs on natural gas, utilizing a natural gas-fired combined cycle technology, but also has the capability to use petroleum liquids. It comprises six generators.
In the most recent year of reported data, the plant generated 222,435 MWh of electricity, achieving a capacity factor of 64.1%. The plant operates within the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO) balancing authority and the Northeast Power Coordinating Council (NPCC) NERC region. Cornell University Central Heat is ranked as the 65th largest power plant in New York out of 102 plants, and nationally it is ranked 1186 out of 1963 plants.
Generated from EIA, GEM, and public data sources
NERC Region
NPCC
Balancing Authority
New York Independent System Operator
Grid Voltage
115 kV
Regulatory Status
NR
Entity Type
Commercial
Sector
Commercial CHP
19.9K MWh
Latest Month
222.4K MWh
Annual Generation
64.1%
Capacity Factor
No financial data available for this plant.
Point of Interconnection
Nearest Substation
CORNELL____
Substation Distance
< 10 km
Coord Source
NYISO direct
Market Position
ISO/RTO Market
NYISO
LMP Node
Zone C
Pricing Hub
NYISO Zone C
Node Source
Shared substation inference
NYC residents agree: heat pumps improve comfort
Residents of a 10-unit apartment building retrofitted with electric heat pumps preferred the pumps to their oil-fueled boiler.
Cornell’s deep-down and rocky quest to unlock geothermal for New York
The university is drilling for geothermal energy to directly warm its campus upstate. The system could curb emissions without straining the...
OpenAI's New Data Centers Will Draw More Power Than the Entirety of New York City, Sam Altman Says
OpenAI's planned AI data center projects would consume as much as the entire city of New York City and San Diego combined.
Sam Altman’s AI empire will devour as much power as New York City and San Diego combined. Experts say it’s ‘scary’
Andrew Chien told Fortune he's been a computer scientist for 40 years but we're close to “some seminal moments for how we think about AI and...
Last updated 2026-03-26
View all 10 articles