February 12, 2009

California Utility Looks to Mojave Desert Project for Solar Power
By ANDREW REVKIN
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/12/science/earth/12solar.html?ref=business&pagewanted=print


The largest utility in California, squeezed by rising demand for 
electricity and looming state deadlines to curb fossil fuels, has signed 
a deal to buy solar power from seven immense arrays of mirrors, towers 
and turbines to be installed in the Mojave Desert.

The contracts amount to the world’s largest single deal for new solar 
energy capacity, said officials from the utility, Southern California 
Edison, and BrightSource Energy, the company that would build and run 
the plants. When fully built, the solar arrays on a sunny day would 
supply 1,300 megawatts of electricity, somewhat more than a modern 
nuclear power plant.

That is enough electricity to power about 845,000 homes.

The companies acknowledged that several hurdles would have to be 
surmounted before the first surge of electricity flows from the desert — 
in theory around 2013 — toward power-hungry cities more than 200 miles away.

First is approval by the state Public Utilities Commission. But more 
challenging, they said, is a series of permits for improving 
transmission lines. That process in the past has taken seven to 10 years 
per project, said Stuart R. Hemphill, vice president for renewable and 
alternative power for the utility.

“The reality is that renewable projects are very far away from where 
customers are,” Mr. Hemphill said. “The key is to have transmission built.”

He said he was confident the solar project would succeed, and emphasized 
that it was part of the company’s accelerating shift toward new energy 
sources, including recent large contracts for wind turbines, 
photovoltaic rooftop panels and geothermal power. “What we’re doing is 
changing the shape of the way the electric system is going to operate in 
California,” he said.

BrightSource, with investors as varied as Google and the VantagePoint 
venture capital firm — and with advisers that include the environmental 
campaigner and lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — has refined a decades-old 
technology. Thousands of small mirrors focus intense desert sunlight on 
a central tower, where it generates steam to drive a turbine.

Officials from the utility and plant builder said the cost of the plants 
and the electricity they will produce could not be disclosed under 
California law.

The deal is one of many signs that concentrated solar power, after 
decades of ups and downs, is finding an important place around the 
world, said Severin Borenstein, a specialist in energy policy at the 
Haas School of Business of the University of California, Berkeley.

But the technology remains substantially more expensive than coal as an 
electricity source, Mr. Borenstein said, and further expansion will 
depend on whether the public continues to support renewable mandates or 
a rising price on emissions from coal burning. “Everybody’s for reducing 
greenhouse gases until you start having to pay for it,” he said.

California is imposing one of the country’s most aggressive 
renewable-power mandates on its utilities. Southern California Edison, 
Pacific Gas and Electric and other providers are racing to meet a 
deadline of having at least 20 percent of electricity flowing from 
renewable sources by the end of 2010.

Vanessa McGrady, a spokeswoman for Southern California Edison, said the 
utility now gets 16 percent of its electricity from renewable sources.

Even with the new plants and other nonpolluting energy options, the 
state still faces big energy and emissions challenges, given relentless 
growth in demand for electricity at peak times.

In 2008, Pacific Gas and Electric, in Northern California, entered 
agreements to buy nearly 900 megawatts of power from BrightSource of 
Oakland, Calif. BrightSource has installed a pilot plant in the Negev 
Desert of Israel.

Other designs for plants that concentrate sunlight to generate power are 
in operation or under development in Spain, the Middle East, north 
Africa, and elsewhere in the Southwest.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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