Source: U.S.
Energy Information Administration, Annual Electric Generator
Report and Monthly Update (Forms EIA-860 and EIA-860M) Note:
This map excludes generators for which solar thermal energy is not used
as the primary energy source, such as the 75-MW Martin Solar Energy Center, which connects
a parabolic trough field to an existing natural gas combined-cycle plant.
Several large, new solar thermal power plants are expected to begin
commercial operation by the end of 2013, more than doubling the solar thermal
generating capacity in the United States. The projects use different solar
thermal technologies and storage options. Abengoa's Solana plant, which came on
line in October 2013, is a 250-megawatt (MW) parabolic trough plant in Gila
Bend, Arizona with integrated thermal storage. BrightSource's Ivanpah, expected
to enter service by the end of 2013, is a 391-MW power tower plant in
California's Mojave Desert and does not include storage.
Solana and Ivanpah are much larger than solar thermal plants that have previously entered service in the United States. Over the past decade, a few smaller-scale and demonstration solar thermal projects have entered service. The only other dedicated solar thermal plants larger than 10 MW in the United States are the series of Solar Energy Generating System (SEGS) plants built in California in the 1980s and early 1990s and the Nevada Solar One parabolic trough project completed in 2007.
EIA projections for total solar thermal capacity additions in 2013 and 2014 include six projects for a total of 1,257 MW, with more expected in 2015 and 2016. However, while these solar thermal capacity additions are significant for the technology, they represent only 4% of total expected capacity additions for 2013 and 2014 (see chart below). Solar thermal capacity additions also continue to be outpaced by solar photovoltaic (PV) capacity additions, even though solar PV has only meaningfully entered the utility-scale market in the past few years.
Source: U.S.
Energy Information Administration, Annual Electric Generator
Report and Monthly Update (Forms EIA-860 and EIA-860M)
The tabs below describe the solar thermal technologies at Solana and Ivanpah, as well as Solana's storage deployment.
All five of the major solar thermal projects—including Solana and Ivanpah—that are scheduled to come on line in 2013 and 2014 were awarded loans through the U.S. Department of Energy's Loan Guarantee Program. Solana received a federal loan guarantee for $1.45 billion of the approximately $2 billion cost of the project, according to the parent company, Abengoa. BrightSource Energy reports a $1.6 billion federal loan guarantee on the approximately $2.2 billion Ivanpah project. (EIA-DOE)
1 comment:
Solar batteries are very useful & convenient especially when there is such shortage for non-renewable source of energy.
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