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GE Invests in Solar Thermal Company

The company thinks adding solar-thermal technology to its natural-gas plants will make them run more cheaply and efficiently
August 15, 2011

GE has agreed to invest up to $40 million in eSolar, a California-based developer of large solar thermal power systems. The investment follows a licensing agreement that GE struck with eSolar in June that will see the two companies supplying technology that combines solar-thermal and natural-gas power systems. The hybrid technology reduces carbon emissions and pollutants that would otherwise come from a stand-alone natural-gas plant.

GE wants to package eSolar’s solar-thermal technology, which uses a large field of mirrors to focus the sun on a central tower to produce steam, with a new line of natural-gas plants known as “combined cycle” systems because they capture their own waste heat to power a steam cycle. This process increases the plant’s operating efficiency. The combined-cycle plants achieve up to 61 percent efficiency and use a new type of gas turbine that can more quickly adapt to the variability of some renewable energy sources, such as solar.

Adding eSolar’s technology could boost that efficiency even further. Its precisely positioned mirrors achieve temperatures of up to 580 °C and produce enough heat to turn water into steam. When the sun is shining, the steam augments the steam cycle of GE’s natural-gas plant, increasing overall plant efficiency to around 70 percent.

Such hybrid facilities, called integrated solar combined-cycle plants, are considered one of the most economical ways to introduce solar energy to a country’s power mix. This is especially true in Africa, the Middle East, and the sunnier parts of Europe and the United States, where GE and eSolar plan to focus their sales efforts.

Integrating solar-thermal technology with gas plants means they can share the same steam turbines, generators, and switch gear, potentially cutting the cost of solar thermal in half, according to Justin Zachary, a solar thermal expert with Bechtel. “This is a natural fit,” says Zachary. But  he says  there is still plenty to learn. “It will take some time to prove the current technologies,” he says. “The integration of the two systems in terms of controls and water quality still represents serious challenges.”

Areva and Alstom, both of France, and Germany’s Siemens have made similar investments over the past two years, and each have a hybrid solar-gas plant offering. There are several integrated solar-gas plants under construction in North Africa and the Middle East. GE’s first project is a 530-megawatt plant in Turkey that will include 50 megawatts of eSolar’s solar thermal technology. The project, expected to be operational in 2015, will also integrate 22 megawatts of wind energy.

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