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Friday, July 10, 2009

Large Photovoltaic Plant Announced

A sprawling solar farm is planned for sunny central Washington State.
By David Rotman

A private investment group called Teanaway Solar Reserve says that it plans to build a massive 75-megawatt solar facility that will sprawl over some 400 acres in Cle Elum, WA, a rural area about 80 miles east of Seattle. The solar farm will be by far the largest in the Northwest, and much larger than any existing photovoltaic plant anywhere. (A 60-megawatt plant in Spain now holds the world record, while a 14-megawatt photovoltaic facility at Nellis Air Force Base, in Nevada, is the largest photovoltaic facility in the United States.) However, the solar facility in Washington is only one of several larger photovoltaic plants that have been recently announced, including several in California that would exceed 200 megawatts; a 60-megawatt plant is planned for Chicago.

Washington appears to be an odd location for a solar plant. While central Washington is, unlike Seattle, actually quite sunny--Howard Trott, Teanaway's managing director, estimates that the location has 300 sunny days a year--it is also home to some of the country's cheapest electricity because of its hydroelectric capacity. However, Trott says, Washington's consumers will favor photovoltaic-generated electricity because it is "very green," and they will pay a premium for it, "which will make us profitable."

Trott declined to disclose many financial details of the project or his company except to say that the costs of the solar farm will likely "run north of a hundred million." His plan calls for a solar producer to build a manufacturing facility at the site to provide the 400,000 panels that the solar farm will need. Trott, who acknowledges that he has no previous experience in the solar industry, says that it has not yet been decided whether the new solar facility will use conventional silicon solar cells or thin-film photovoltaics. Indeed, it is still very early days for the private solar company and its Washington project. Says Trott: "Yesterday, we rented an office."

Comments

  • Cle Elum
    Cle Elum is decidedly east of Seattle, not west, which is how it ends up being in central Washington.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    MITBeta
    07/13/2009
    Posts:29
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
  • location
    It really would be news if located 80 miles west of Seattle!

    Building in the land of cheap power plus something like 4 hours a day of good sun. Think there are far better locations.

    Just the type of company to avoid investing in.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    kxbpy
    07/13/2009
    Posts:1
    Avg Rating:
    3/5
    • Re: location
      Sorry for the mistake. Yes, 80 miles east of Seattle.
      Rate this comment: 12345

      David Rotman
      07/13/2009
      Posts:1
    • Re: location
      to kxbpy:
      solar is being used to power towns in Germany and throughout northern europe, it can be used in Washington state.  Common misconceptions by those who have not educated themselves on solar and wind are:
      solar misconception:  needs to be built in desert areas of the south
      windo misconception:  you need constant strong winds

      both of these are gross misconceptions.  do your homework before posting
      Rate this comment: 12345

      tulcak
      08/06/2009
      Posts:3
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