Английская Википедия:California Valley Solar Ranch

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox power station

The California Valley Solar Ranch (CVSR) is a 250 megawatt (MWAC) photovoltaic power plant in the Carrizo Plain, northeast of California Valley. The project is owned by NRG Energy, and SunPower is the EPC contractor and technology provider. The project constructed on Шаблон:Convert of a Шаблон:Convert site of former grazing land.[1] It is utilizing high-efficiency, crystalline PV panels designed and manufactured by SunPower. The project includes up to 88,000 SunPower solar tracking devices to hold PV panels that track the sun across the sky.

Project overview

The project began construction in 2011, and began operation in 2012 with 22 MW completed. It was fully completed in October 2013.[2] At the time it was completed, "the California Valley Solar Ranch will power about 100,000 homes and will be one of the largest photovoltaic (PV) solar power plants in the world".[3]

The project is being constructed on Шаблон:Convert of a Шаблон:Convert site of former grazing land.[1] It is utilizing high-efficiency, crystalline PV panels designed and manufactured by SunPower. The project includes up to 88,000 SunPower solar tracking devices to hold PV panels that track the sun across the sky. The project delivers approximately 550 gigawatt-hours (GW·h) annually of renewable energy and has a capacity of 250 MW.[4] While the plant only has a capacity factor of 25%, its power is generated during the middle of the day, when demand for electricity — and price — is much higher than at night.

Power Purchase Agreement

On August 14, 2008, Pacific Gas and Electric announced an agreement to buy all the power from the power plant.[5] A Conditional Use Permit application for the project was filed with the County of San Luis Obispo Planning and Building Department on January 14, 2009. On November 30, 2010, NRG Energy announced that it would buy CVSR from SunPower for "up to $450 million".[6] In September 2011, the Department of Energy (DOE) offered NRG Solar a $1.237 billion loan from the federal government to cover most of the construction cost.[7] The total cost of the project is estimated to be $1.6 billion.[8] Шаблон:Wide image

Environment

The Carrizo Plain is home to 13 species listed as endangered either by the state or federal government, including the San Joaquin kit fox, giant kangaroo rat, and the California condor.[9] SunPower worked with the community to protect local wildlife habitat and migration patterns, and reduced the amount of traffic in the area during construction.[10] In 2012, it was reported that SunPower and First Solar had designed a plan to create a 19,000 acre reserve for the giant kangaroo rat, San Joaquin kit fox and golden eagle in order to address concerns about habitat destruction.[11]

Electricity production

Generation (MW·h) of California Valley Solar Ranch [12]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Total
2012 4,014 4,190 5,504 8,019 21,727
2013 15,824 20,631 24,304 28,133 10,533 25,459 31,131 51,646 63,073 56,747 37,300 34,583 399,364
2014 35,851 36,710 54,654 66,210 78,967 84,024 77,526 74,398 60,789 50,939 36,701 27,634 684,403
2015 36,087 43,208 60,175 67,920 70,492 77,665 75,705 75,695 60,536 48,796 40,421 31,553 688,253
2016 27,064 48,485 58,571 63,317 71,275 80,545 82,609 74,310 63,259 44,720 37,633 28,008 679,796
2017 25,685 28,689 53,629 57,222 72,972 79,042 71,978 66,590 62,052 57,168 35,337 37,178 647,541
Average Annual Production (2014-2017 675,000

Incidents

A fire removed 84% of the generating capacity from service in 2019 when poles and cables were damaged by an "avian incident."[13]

See also

Шаблон:Stack Шаблон:Commons Category

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links


Шаблон:Generating stations in California Шаблон:Solar power in the United States