Break point (MWh) calculation

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Hameedulla-Ekhlas

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Dear all,

I was just reading one topic and faced one problem and can anybody guess the hilighted 155 where comes from in the below equation


The break-even point can be calculated as follows:
Break-even (MWh) = Fixed Costs/(Selling Price

(Variable Cost/Unit)
= $4,570,000/($30.00 ? $19.80)
= 448,040 MWh

Assuming a reliability of 95%, 1,289,910 MWh are available during the year

(24 ? 365 ? 0.95 ? 155).

Therefore, the break-even utilization is 448,040 MWh/1,289,910 MWh,
or 34.7%, which is 53.8 MW of capacity that needs to be tied down on longterm
contract.
 
155 must be the capacity in MW of the generating plant that is being evaluated. If a 155 MW plant ran 365 days a year, the energy output would be 365?24?155 = 1,357,800 MWh. If it only available 95% of the time, then 95% of this is available (1,289,910 MWh).
 
155 must be the capacity in MW of the generating plant that is being evaluated. If a 155 MW plant ran 365 days a year, the energy output would be 365?24?155 = 1,357,800 MWh. If it only available 95% of the time, then 95% of this is available (1,289,910 MWh).

exactly and thank you.
 
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