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Posts Tagged ‘Concentrated Solar Power’

$467 Million in Stimulus Money Released for Solar Power & Geothermal

In Barack Obama, alternative energy, green policy, green politics, green technology, photovoltaics, solar energy on May 28, 2009 at 11:20 pm

solar panel photo
photo: David Blaikie via flickr.

Solar power and geothermal power have finally gotten their portion of money allocated in the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act, to the tune of $467 million. President Obama announced this by touting the usual rhetoric of decreasing dependency on foreign oil and putting people back to work in through green energy jobs. Energy Secretary Stephen Chu too talked up green jobs, plus the role renewable energy can play in combatting climate change Frankly, absolutely nothing new or novel was said, but it is great that solar and geothermal have finally been shown some federal stimulus love. This is how all that money is being divided up:

Geothermal to Get Most of the Funding
All told geothermal is getting $350 million: $140 million is going toward Geothermal Demonstration Projects; $80 million towards Enhanced Geothermal Systems Technology Research and Development; $100 million towards Innovative Exploration Techniques; $30 million towards a National Geothermal Data System, Resource Assessment, and Classification System.

Solar Power Gets One-Third of Geothermal
Solar power has been allocated $117.6 million: $51.5 million for Photovoltaic Technology Development; $40.5 for Solar Energy Deployment (“Projects in this area will focus on non-technical barriers to solar energy deployment, including grid connection, market barriers to solar energy adoption in cities, and the shortage of trained solar energy installers.”); Concentrating Solar Power Research and Development brings up the rear with $25.6 million.

More: Department of Energy

Two More 50 MW Concentrating Solar Power Plants in Spain: 100,000 Homes to be Supplied

In Concentrated Solar Power, solar energy, technology on May 11, 2009 at 1:26 am

parabolic trough solar power photo
photo: Abengoa Solar

Two weeks ago, Spain’s Abengoa Solar announced that it has begun operating the world’s largest solar power tower near Seville. Now the SAME company will begin construction on two 50 MW concentrating solar power projects, using a different technology:

The two new projects in the town of Écija—dubbed Helioenergy 1 and Helioenergy 2—will deploy parabolic trough technology to generate electricity sufficient for 52,000 households, Abengoa said. The plants are expected to begin operating in 2011.

These two parabolic trough solar power plants, together with three others of the same size, plus three solar towers under construction are all part of the Solucar power complex, which will have a capacity of 300 MW by 2013.

More: Abengoa Solar
via: Reuters Carbon Community

Solar Power
World’s Largest Solar Tower Now Powers 10,000 Homes
500 MW of New Solar Power Plants in California, Southwest to be Developed by NRG Energy & eSolar
Another 200 Megawatts of Solar Thermal Power Coming to Arizona

20 MW Solar Tower Project: Just the Beginning

In Concentrated Solar Power, alternative energy, environment, green technology, solar energy on November 25, 2008 at 3:34 pm

Source: “20MW Solar Tower Project: Just the Beginning”, www.treehugger.com, Science & Technology, Sami Grover, 24th Nov 2008

Solar Towers use concentrated solar thermal energy to generate electricity photo

Spanish Concentrated Solar Thermal Plants Set to Grow Exponentially 
Viva España! No sooner does Kimberley post on a solar electric project in a Spanish cemetery that we also read over at The Guardian about the expanding ambitions ofSpain’s solar tower developers. As our readers will know from our previous posts onsolar towers, they are an innovative form of renewable energy that uses giant mirrors to focus sunlight onto a central steam-powered turbine – and they have the potential to produce massive amounts of clean, renewable energy. Not only is a 20MW plant, known as PS20, going to be inaugurated in the desert outside Seville in January, but developers are eventually looking to expand to 300MW of capacity. And that’s just the beginning, as the Guardian report explains:

Spanish firms are charging ahead with CSP: more than 50 solar projects around Spain have been approved for construction by the government and, by 2015, the country will generate more than 2GW of power from CSP, comfortably exceeding current national targets. The companies are also exporting their technology to Morocco, Algeria and the US.”CSP is at the very beginning of a big boom,” said José Luis García, at Greenpeace in Spain. “Spain is in a good position to develop and implement the technology. We have the sun so we are in the best position to lead in this field.”

 

The Guardian

Incredible Sahara Forest Project to Generate Fresh Water, Solar Power and Crops – A Collaboration between CSP & Seawater Greenhouses

In alternative energy, architecture, environment, solar energy on September 14, 2008 at 12:43 pm

The Sahara Forest Project image

Can you imagine being able to produce enough water in the Sahara to grow crops there? Can you imagine harnessing sufficient quantities of solar power to supply electricity to cities in Africa and cities in Europe? Can you imagine producing a sustainable bio-fuel that doesn’t impact on world food supplies? Charlie Paton,Michael Pawlyn and Bill Watts can and what’s more they can imagine all these happening in the same place at the same time.

This week this trio of visionaries launched the Sahara Forest Project: their proposal to combine two innovative technologies, Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) and Seawater Greenhouses, to produce renewable energy, water and food in an area of desert known to be one of the hottest places on earth.

Multitasking renewable solutions
It has often been said that there will be no one solution to solving the climate crisis and all those issues that surround it, such as energy sources, food prices and water supply. We need a portfolio of technologies to help us to combat these advancing problems. The Sahara Forest Project is one of the first projects we’ve seen that proposes not only to combine technologies to optimise performance and production, but also aims to tackle all of the serious challenges mentioned above. It is a bold and ambitious plan that, if realised, could have a powerful positive impact not only for the Sahara region, but also for Europe and the rest of the world.

Positive Collaboration
The most exciting aspect of the Sahara Forest Project is not specifically the use of these technologies. We’ve read about Seawater Greenhouses and Concentrated Solar Power and how they’re being used to great effect. It is the fact that they are being used together in the same place, to support each other and optimize their operating capacities to produce energy and water and by proxy vegetation.

This sense of collaboration is echoed in the team of people behind the proposal: an inventor – Charlie Paton, creator of the Seawater Greenhouse; an architect – Michael Pawlyn of Exploration Architecture, previously of Grimshaw and the lead architect on the iconic Eden Project; an engineer – Bill Watts of Max Fordham & Partners, an engineering firm that focuses on energy efficient systems for the built environment. These three men have brought their considerable expertise together to create a truly innovative proposal.

illustration of seawater greenhouses effecting climate image
Illustration of greenhouses having a similar effect on the climate as a region of forest, yet providing a net input of water vapour from the sea.

What does a Seawater Greenhouse do?
The Seawater Greenhouse was designed to address the problem of irrigating crops in arid coastal regions by evaporating seawater and condensing it into fresh water. This helps to reverse the trend of desertification created by normal industrial greenhouses, which can use up to five times more water to irrigate crops than the respective region’s average annual rainfall. The system works by mimicking the natural hydrological cycle where seawater heated by the sun, evaporates, cools down to form clouds and returns to the earth as rain, fog or dew.

What does Concentrated Solar Power do?
CSP is currently seen as one of the most exciting and powerful ways of harnessing the sun’s energy to create power. Like the Seawater Greenhouse, CSP works well in hot arid areas where the sun is at its most powerful. The sun’s rays, collected through reflecting mirrors, are used to heat water which then produces steam to power turbines. Examples currently working are Nevada Solar 1 near Las Vegas, and the solar tower in Barstow California. It has been proposed that the energy created by CSP in the Sahara could be transported to Europe with minimal loss via high voltage DC power lines.

sketch of Sahara Forest Project and photo of Solar Power Tower image
Sketch showing long ‘hedge’ of Seawater Greenhouses oriented towards the wind.Photo of Solar Power Tower in Barstow, California

How will the Sahara Forest Project work?
These CSP / Seawater Greenhouse technologies will work together at a location some distance from the north coast of Africa, hopefully at a point below sea level which will reduce or potentially eliminate the costs of pumping seawater. The scheme has been designed as a ‘hedge’ of greenhouses providing a windbreak and shelter for the outdoor planting. CSP arrays will be placed at intervals along the greenhouse ‘hedge’. The greenhouses produce five time more fresh water than needed for the plants inside. This surplus will be used to irrigate the planted orchards and the Jatrophra crop, which can be turned into bio-fuel for transportation and other needs.

Commercial Synergies
The Sahara Forest Project team tell us that the innovative interaction between the two technologies helps each to function more efficiently:

1.CSP systems need water for cleaning the mirrors and for the generation of steam to drive the turbines which the greenhouses can provide.

2.The Greenhouse evaporators make very efficient dust traps (as do plants that are growing outside) which benefits the CSP since the mirrors stay cleaner and therefore operate more 
efficiently.

3. In solar thermal power plants, only about 25% of the collected solar energy is converted into electricity. If combined with sea water another 50% of the collected energy, normally released as heat, can be used for desalination. This way, up to 85% of the collected solar energy can be used.

In conclusion the Sahara Forest Project works on many levels. By combining the benefits of Concentrated Solar Power and Seawater Greenhouses the design team has vastly scaled up the positive outputs of renewable energy, food production and fresh water supply. Furthermore they tell us that “the scheme would also have the restorative effect of returning areas of desert to forested land and sequestering substantial quantities of atmospheric carbon in new plant growth and reactivated soils.” Surely this is a perfect example of the potential power of human and technological collaboration.

:: Seawater Greenhouse

:: Exploration Architecture
:: Max Fordham & Partners

More on Concentrated Solar Power:
Solar Energy in the Sahara to Power Europe Gains Support 
Solar Thermal Power in North-Africa: How Much Land to Power the World?
Switched On: 15,000 Homes Powered By Nevada Solar One 
1000 Suns From Huge Concentrating Dish
Abengoa Solar to Build World’s Largest Solar Plant in Arizona

Source:

“Incredible Sahara Forest Project to Generate Fresh Water, Solar Power and Crops in African Desert”, treehugger.com, Design & Architecture, Leonora Oppenheim, 2nd Sept 2008