Monday, August 25, 2008

Solar Is Heating Up

Salt, water, and hydrogen. Concentrated solar power, using the sun rays to heat something to move turbines and create electricity.

As the first commercial “concentrating solar power” or CSP plant built in 17 years, Nevada Solar One marks the reemergence and updating of a decades-old technology that could play a large new role in US power production, many observers say.

“Concentrating solar is pretty hot right now,” says Mark Mehos, program manager for CSP at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Co. “Costs look pretty good compared to natural gas [power]. Public policy, climate concern, and new technology are driving it, too.”

Spread in military rows across 300 acres of sun-baked earth, Nevada Solar One's trough-shaped parabolic mirrors are the core of this CSP plant – also called a “solar thermal” plant. The mirrors focus sunlight onto receiver tubes, heating a fluid that, at 735 degrees F., flows through a heat exchanger to a steam generator that supplies 64 megawatts of electricity to 14,000 Las Vegas homes.

Today there are just 420 megawatts of csp but it could be as much as 4,500 in the near future.

Desert land lures developers In fact, there's a land rush at the federal Bureau of Land Management. As of July, the BLM reported more than 125 applications to build solar power on about 1 million acres of desert, up from just a handful of proposals a few years ago.

“We think there's a good market there,” says Travis Bradford, an expert at the Prometheus Institute, a Boston-based solar-energy market research firm. His firm sees 12,000 megawatts (12 gigawatts) of solar thermal installed by 2020 and maybe 20 times that in coming decades.

With natural gas prices high CSP is competitive but it still needs tax credits.
To stimulate development, Spain has deployed hefty, long-term feed-in tariffs. But in the US market, solar thermal is hanging by a thread. The investment tax credit, which covers 30 percent of a CSP facility's cost, will expire at year's end unless renewed by Congress. But bills to renew the ITC have been blocked eight times this year by Senate Republicans.

In case you were wondering, Obama voted for them and McCain did not vote any of the eight times. Including the time it had 59 votes but needed 60 to break a republican filibuster. So when you see those adds where he is in front of wind mills, know he is lying.

1 comment:

ebeing said...

Solar Thermal and Solar Water heater can save 30-50% from your electric bill easily paying for themselves within 5 years.

Buy solar power and solar thermal systems for a greener life!



Joseph