Abengoa and BrightSource Energy to create 2,000 jobs over 3 years on 500 MW project in California

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Greentech Lead Europe: Abengoa, a provider of technology for sustainable development in the energy and environment sectors, and BrightSource Energy, a provider of concentrating solar thermal technology solutions, have joined hands to develop and operate the world’s two largest solar power towers in California.

The Palen project consists of two 250 MW units located in a Department of Interior Solar Energy Zone in Riverside County, California. Together the plants will produce enough electricity to power 200,000 households and will prevent the emission of about 17 million tons of CO2 over its life cycle.

The two companies will work together to permit and finance the 500 MW Palen Solar Electric Generating System. Abengoa will build the plants as the Engineering, Procurement and Construction contractor, and will lead the operation and maintenance (O&M) of the plants once online. BrightSource will provide the solar field technology and plant design.

With permitting and development under way, construction is expected to begin at the end of 2013 and will create more than 2,000 jobs. The solar plants are expected to come online in 2016.

The Palen site has already received authorization from the California Energy Commission (CEC) for construction and operation of a 500 MW solar thermal project.  In December 2012, BrightSource filed an amendment to the existing permit seeking authorization to deploy solar power tower technology.

The new design will reduce the project footprint by 13 percent, from 4,366 acres to approximately 3,800 acres, and use 50 percent less water by deploying a dry-cooling technology.

Each unit at Palen will feature a 750-foot tall tower that allows for a high concentration of heliostats. This design significantly reduces the amount of land required to produce energy – up to 33 percent less than a typical photovoltaic (PV) farm.

Additionally, the design places mirrors on individual poles placed directly into the ground without concrete foundations, allowing the solar field to be built around the natural contours of the land, to retain native vegetation under the mirrors, and to avoid areas of sensitive vegetation.

Abengoa operates four solar towers in Southern Europe, including the first in commercial operation worldwide since 2007, and is currently building a fifth tower in South Africa. The company currently has 743 MW of installed solar capacity around the world and 910 MW under construction. It is one of the few companies in the world that builds and operates both parabolic trough and tower CSP plants.

BrightSource has solar towers in operation in Coalinga, CA, and in the Negev Desert and its technology is currently being deployed at the 377 MW Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System, the largest solar tower facility under construction in the world.

editor@greentechlead.com

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