PG&E To Buy Electricity From Massive Solar Park
The San Francisco-based utility signed a 25-year contract with Solel Solar Systems, based in
The
Solel, which would build and operate the park, still needs approval from
"Preliminary research suggests the environmental impact will be minimal," said Keely Wachs, a spokesman for PG&E, which supplies electricity to 5.1 million customers in northern and central
Company officials hope to begin constructing the park in 2009 and begin generating carbon-free electricity in 2011. Three sites are being considered for the project, which would cover up to 6,000 acres and use transmission lines formerly used by a now-defunct coal plant near
The contract filed with the PUC Wednesday would help PG&E comply with a state law that requires electric utilities to secure at least 20 percent of their electricity supplies from renewable energy sources such as wind and solar by 2010.
The plant would employ solar-thermal technology that would use 1.2 million mirrors to harness the desert sun's power. Rows of trough-like mirrors would heat fluid that generates steam, powering turbines that produce electricity that would be fed into PG&E's electric grid.
Currently, most solar power projects use photovoltaic technology in which electricity is generated onsite from rooftop panels on homes, businesses and public buildings.
Solar-thermal is less expensive and easier to build at a large-scale than photovoltaic technology, officials said.
"We see solar-thermal as one of the most promising sources of renewable energy," Wachs said.
Solel, one of the world's largest solar-thermal companies, is building similar projects in
"The sun is shining there at a very high intensity," making it one of the best locations for solar-thermal power, said Solel CEO Avi Brenmiller.
Two years ago, Southern California Edison signed a contract with Phoenix-based Stirling Energy Systems to secure 500 megawatts of electricity from a 4,500-acre solar-thermal project in the
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