By CSP World on 9 October, 2013
Abengoa has announced
in a press release that "Solana, the world´s largest parabolic trough
plant with a total installed capacity of 280 gross megawatts (MW) and also the
first solar plant in the United
States with thermal energy storage, has
successfully passed commercial operation tests".
The company says
this milestone marks a major accomplishment for Abengoa and the Concentrating
Solar Power industry.
Solana is the
second commercial CSP plant in the US to use thermal energy storage
(TES), and the first with aTES system that is able to generate electricity for
six hours without the concurrent use of the solar field. This is a turning
point for renewable energy in this the U.S., serving as a tangible
demonstration that solar energy can be stored and dispatched upon demand.
A previous
project, the SEGS I plant also included a thermal energy storage system for
some time. The plant stored the hot thermal oil directly, instead of the
current systems that transfer heat to molten salt. A fire in the hot tank made
the system unusable and went out of work. More details are available at the csp
world map: http://www.csp-world.com/cspworldmap
Solana, located
near Gila Bend and about 70
miles southwest of Phoenix ,
Arizona , began construction in
2010 and, on Monday, October 7, successfully fulfilled production forecasts
required to-date and testing for commercial operation. These tests included
operating at the turbine's full capacity while charging the thermal storage
system, continuing to produce electricity after the sun goes down, and starting
up the plant and producing six hours of electricity using only the thermal
storage system. These tests successfully demonstrated the various operation
modes of the plant's operation.
Abengoa's first
utility-scale solar plant in the United States employs parabolic
trough technology. This technology consists of parabolic shaped mirrors mounted
on structures that track the sun and concentrate the sun's heat, later
transforming water into steam and powering a conventional steam turbine. This
mature technology has additional value since the heat can also be stored and
used to produce clean electricity after the sun goes down or during a
transitory period.
This ability to
generate electricity when needed, or dispatchability, is one of the unique characteristics
of concentrating solar power versus other types of renewables. The six
hours of clean energy generated by Solana's thermal storage system without the
use of the solar field will satisfy Arizona 's
peak electricity demands during the summer evenings and early nighttime hours. Dispatchability
also eliminates intermittency issues that other renewables, such as wind and
photovoltaics, contend with, providing stability to the grid and thus
increasing the value of the energy generated by CSP.
Arizona Public
Service (APS), the largest utility in Arizona ,
will purchase all of the electricity produced by the solar plant for 30 years
through a power purchase agreement with Abengoa.
Solana will
generate clean energy equivalent to that needed to power 70,000 households and
will prevent about half a million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) from being
emitted into the atmosphere per year. The construction of Solana led to the
creation of more than 2,000 jobs and a national supply chain that spans 165
companies in 29 states.
The total
investment of the plant is approximately two billion dollars and during
financing, Solana received a federal loan guarantee for $1.45 billion from the
United States Department of Energy Federal Loan Guarantee Program. This support
made the construction of Solana possible, creating or maintaining thousands of
jobs both in the building of the plant as well as those direct and indirect
jobs in the supply chain, as well as providing the Southwest with clean,
sustainable energy using innovative technology.
Abengoa currently
has 1,223 MW of concentrating solar power in operation and 430 MW under
construction. It is the largest CSP company in the world and one of the few
that constructs and operates both solar tower and parabolic trough plants.
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