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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Solar power towers have maker beaming

    Solar power towers have maker beaming

    Two major California utilities sign on for projects

    By Onell R. Soto
    STAFF WRITER
    2:00 a.m. August 6, 2009

    As California and the nation seek to make electricity without burning fossil fuels, a new entrant jumped on the grid yesterday by focusing sunlight from 24,000 mirrors on a pair of towers north of Los Angeles.

    The 850-degree heat atop the 160-foot towers boiled water, and when the resulting steam spun a turbine on the ground, the plant built by Pasadena-based eSolar became the first commercial solar tower project in the United States.

    By utility standards, the Sierra SunTower is small – enough to power about 4,000 homes at its peak 5-megawatt production.

    But eSolar has deals in place to build larger plants, about 600 megawatts of peak power production in California and the Southwest, plus a gigawatt in India. To produce more power, each plant would have more towers, up to 16 for each steam turbine.

    The company sells the equipment, other firms own the plants and sell the power.

    Two of California's biggest utilities, Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric, have signed deals to buy their power. San Diego Gas & Electric Co. has not.

    eSolar is one of several companies racing for the answer of how to power American life without burning fossil fuels, and it's focusing on one of the two proven ways to make electricity from the sun:

    Photovoltaic panels, which make power from the light itself.

    Thermal systems, which harness the sun's heat, using fluids – ranging from hydrogen to steam to molten salt – to turn it into mechanical energy to drive generators.

    Neither method, so far, has proved as cost-effective as traditional power plants, and experts doubt there will be a one-size-fits-all solution.

    In urban areas – and hazy or cloudy climates – photovoltaics can make sense because they're less complicated, smaller and can make power even with diffuse light.

    But for power sellers with access to large spaces with direct sunlight, the thermal systems can offer benefits because they can turn more of the sunlight into electricity and stop producing power more gradually when the sun goes away.

    Companies, with a big push from government, are working on ways to lower costs.

    Some, such as FirstSolar, an Arizona company that has teamed up with San Diego-based Sempra Energy, are focusing on making a lot of inexpensive photovoltaic panels and spreading them on cheap desert land.

    Sempra says the power it produces at a plant outside Las Vegas is the cheapest solar power on the market, but it won't reveal the cost, and says it is still more expensive than natural gas.

    Others, such as Stirling Energy Systems, which has signed a deal with SDG&E, are focusing on efficiency. At a plant in the Imperial Valley, Stirling plans to have thousands of dishes pointed at the sun. In the middle of each dish, a solar engine driven by sun-heated hydrogen would drive a small generator.

    Other companies try to get more power from photovoltaic technology, or use tubes full of oil in solar troughs, mirrors in the shape of half-pipes, to drive steam turbines.

    Bill Gross, the man behind eSolar, said he started thinking about solar power as a teenager in suburban Los Angeles during the 1973 energy crisis.

    Trained as an engineer, he made solar devices before making a fortune in the software industry and founding Idealab in 1996 as a place to test ideas and build companies.

    The venture pioneered selling toys on the Internet and the search-engine advertising, and of late has been focused on green technology, including Vista electric car maker Aptera.

    eSolar has attracted funding from Silicon Valley and Hollywood, including Google and Stephen Spielberg.

    “I've been dreaming of this day for more than 35 years,â€
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  2. #2
    Senior Member vmonkey56's Avatar
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    "We the People" should start one house at a time by lottery be solarized or wind powered within our communities. And have the extra electricity not used to go back for lowing everyone bill for electricity within a community.
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  3. #3
    Senior Member carolinamtnwoman's Avatar
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    Good post!

  4. #4
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    I never understood why Florida has a load of nuclear plants when they are burning up from the sun.
    I was looking at solar panels for my roof, which would have cost about $10,000 those days, but when I called FPL to ask if I could put excess back into the grid for credit like the Japanese have been doing. They told me no, as they could not trust the source. Huh? A few years later I opened my electric bill and FPL was asking that if customers believed in clean energy, they would increase the bill by about $9 each month so they could build a solar plant.
    It is all about money.
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  5. #5
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    As per usual ALIPAC had this story before USA TODAY.

    First solar 'power towers' produce electricity

    The first U.S. solar "power towers" have produced electricity for commercial use, Scientific American reports.

    The feat occurred yesterday in the Antelope Valley, north of Los Angeles on the edge of the Mojave Desert. Sunlight reflected off 24,000 silver mirrors was concentrated on two 150-foot-tall towers, producing steam to turn a turbine that generated electricity. The mini-plant can produce five megawatts, enough for full power to about 4,000 residential customers of Southern California Edison.

    The demonstration project offers a blueprint for larger plants in California and New Mexico. Fourteen towers will be added to create a 46-megawatt plant (with 200,000 mirrors) capable of generating 90 gigawatt-hours of electricity over a year, according to the start-up firm behind the power plant.

    Here's a video.

    http://blogs.usatoday.com/ondeadline/20 ... icity.html
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