Friday, May 21, 2010

Questa To See Largest U.S. Solar Installation

Chevron breaks ground on solar plant
From New Mexico Business Weekly 
Chevron Corp. has broken ground on what it said will become the largest concentrated solar photovoltaic installation in the country.

The facility will be on the tailing site of Chevron Mining Inc.’s molybdenum mine in Questa. The plant was lauded by The Wilderness Society, one the advocacy groups pushing for renewable energy development on brownfields (abandoned or underused industrial facilities where some level of contamination is present).
Zoe Krasney with The Wilderness Society’s Albuquerque office called the project a “fantastic way to utilize waste land by using our polluted past to get to our clean future.”

The facility will have about 175 solar panels on 20 acres producing one megawatt, and the electricity will be sold to Kit Carson Electric Cooperative through a power purchase agreement. Generally, one megawatt can provide power for about 700 average New Mexico homes.

The mine has operated under various owners since the 1920s, including a period of open pit mining from 1965 until 1983. Waste rock, tailings, runoff and leachate contaminants have been designated for cleanup under the federal Superfund program. Some of the mining-impacted areas are in the process of remediation. Other areas are slated for cleanup at the end of mining operations.

As part of the solar installation agreement, Chevron will use 30 acres of the plant as a pilot demonstration site to evaluate different soil depths suitable for use at the closure of the mine in an attempt to show that shallower depths of one or two feet will still ensure no adverse impacts to the health of the local community and the environment. The Environmental Protection Agency mandated level of capping soil for mine tailings is three feet.

These demonstration sites will be closely monitored over a period of five years by the EPA and evaluated, in conjunction with the New Mexico Environment Department.

Image: Ecoflight via Flickr

New solar array slated for Eastern NM University

Portales News-Tribune
By Argen Duncan: PNT senior writer
With a possible new solar array, Eastern New Mexico University is looking to benefit the environment and save money on electricity. Vice President of Business Affairs Scott Smart said he has put out a request for proposals to construct a solar array on vacant land on Cherry Street near the Greyhound Arena. He said the university spends $1.5 million a year on electricity.

“If the numbers work like we hope, it’ll be about a 10 percent savings on what we pay right now for electricity,” Smart said.

Renewable energy is also a good thing for the university to get into, he said.
“Even if we get into this and couldn’t save money on the electricity, I would still opt for it because it’s a good thing to do for the environment,” Smart said. “I think we all have our role to play in that regard.”
Because rates in this area are low compared to most parts of the country, he said, the savings might be less than expected. Calculations would indicate the amount of power to be generated and the savings before the university entered into a agreement.

If the cost was less than it is now or the same, Smart said, the university would go ahead with the project. If the cost was more, decision-makers would reconsider the proposition in light of budget cuts.
If calculations are favorable to the project, Smart estimated the new solar array could be running by the fall of 2011. The power would be transmitted to a Cherry Street electrical substation that sends power straight to campus, he said.

Smart would like to enter into a purchase power agreement, in which the university doesn’t pay for, build, own or maintain the solar array. Instead, it would contract with the company that does and would agree to buy all of the power generated for 20 years.

Smart said tax breaks and federal stimulus money make such agreements profitable for solar energy companies.

Also, Xcel Energy spokesman Wes Reeves said his company was waiting to learn new rules from legislation that affects its solar energy incentives program, but ENMU would likely be eligible to participate if the solar array were to become a reality.

Businessweek: New Mexico business gets funds for solar research

http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9FKNFP00.htm


An Albuquerque company has been selected by the U.S. Department of Energy to receive funding for research, development and demonstration of concentrating solar power systems capable of producing low-cost electricity.

SkyFuel Inc. will receive up to $4.3 million to pursue component feasibility studies related to concentrating solar power, or CSP, systems. CSP technologies produce electrical power via turbines or engines that are driven by heat concentrated from the sun's energy.

SkyFuel is working on a large-scale trough system that could be used in baseload concentrating solar power generation. Officials say the goal is to improve designs and plants to the point that utility-scale CSP energy can displace traditional coal-burning power plants.

Albuquerque veterans hospital going solar

CST & Eaton Awarded Albuquerque VA Hospital Solar Project
CST, in conjunction with Eaton and their sister company Mosher Enterprises, was issued a Notice of Award for the development of a large photovoltaic project for the VA Hospital in Albuquerque. The project is expected to be several megawatts in size, and once completed, is anticipated to be the largest distributed-generation (DG) solar project in the state of New Mexico. Stay tuned for more details about this exciting project in the coming weeks!

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