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Catching Solar Energy.

Started by irishbobcat, August 28, 2009, 06:53:15 AM

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irishbobcat

Catching Solar Energy.
By George Johnson, National Geographic, September, 2009 issue. "Early on a clear November morning in the Mojave Desert, the sun is barely touching the peaks of the McCullough Range with a cool pink glow. Behind them, a full moon is sinking over the gigawatt glare of Las Vegas. Nevada Solar One is sleeping. But the day's work is about to begin. It is hard to imagine that a power plant could be so beautiful: 250 acres of gently curved mirrors lined up in long troughs like canals of light. Parked facing the ground overnight, they are starting to awaken -- more than 182,000 of them -- and follow the sun. 'Looks like this will be a 700-degree day,' says one of the operators in the control room. His job is to monitor the rows of parabolically shaped mirrors as they concentrate sunlight on long steel pipes filled with circulating oil, heating it as high as 750 degrees Fahrenheit. From the mirror field, the blistering liquid pours into giant radiators that extract the heat and boil water into steam. The steam drives a turbine and dynamo, pushing as much as 64 megawatts onto the grid -- enough to electrify 14,000 households or a few Las Vegas casinos. 'Once the system makes steam, it's very traditional --industry-standard stuff,' says plant manager Robert Cable, pointing toward a gas-fired power plant on the other side of Eldorado Valley Drive. 'We get the same tools and the same parts as the place across the street. 
"When Nevada Solar One came on line in 2007, it was the first large solar plant to be built in the United States in more than 17 years. During that time, solar technology blossomed elsewhere. Nevada Solar One belongs to Acciona, a Spanish company that generates electricity here and sells it to NV Energy, the regional utility. The mirrors were made in Germany... The optimists say that with steady, incremental improvements -- no huge breakthroughs are required -- and with substantial government support, solar power could become as economical and efficient as fossil fuels. The pessimists say they've heard all this before -- 30 years ago, during the presidency of Jimmy Carter. That too was a period of national crisis, triggered by the Arab oil embargo of 1973. Addressing the nation in his cardigan sweater, President Carter called for a new national energy policy with solar energy playing a large part... This time we might just make it. Last February, BrightSource Energy signed contracts with Southern California Edison for a series of power towers in southwestern deserts that could eventually provide 1.3 gigawatts of power, equal to a large coal-fired plant. Meanwhile, Pacific Gas and Electric has commissioned more than 1.8 gigawatts of parabolic troughs, photovoltaics, and BrightSource power towers. Environmentalists are already preparing to fight some of these projects; they would all cover large swaths of desert, and some might use a lot of scarce water for cooling. Like any form of power generation, solar has its trade-offs."

Dennis Spisak Mahoning Valley Green Party
Ohio Green Party
www.votespisak.org/thinkgreen/