First Solar Announces Major Solar Project for Mojave Desert

Ceylan ThomsonPublished on Date August 19th, 2009 by Ceylan Thomson
Posted in Category North America, Category Solar
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First-Solar-logo.jpgFirst Solar, a maker of thin-film solar cells, has signed an agreement with Southern California Edison to sell the utility 550 megawatts of electricity produced by two massive photovoltaic solar farms in the Mojave Desert.

The plants, expected to go online by 2015 and produce enough electricity to power 170,000 homes, would be built on federal land set aside for such solar projects.

Analysts say that the First Solar deal is a sign that large arrays of solar photovoltaic panels can produce electricity competitively with so-called solar-thermal plants, which generate electricity by using mirrors to focus sunlight on liquid-filled boilers to produce steam. Southern California Edison said that Nevada-based First Solar’s solar farms also will produce electricity at a price competitive with natural gas.

“This is the very largest photovoltaic project we have done, demonstrating that at a utility scale, the time has come for such projects,” said a Southern California Edison executive.

Appearing courtesy of Yale Environment 360.

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One Comment to “First Solar Announces Major Solar Project for Mojave Desert”

  • JV says:

    Actually they bought the contract that Optisolar sold when they went out of business. It remains to be seen if they can fulfill it or not. Will also need power lines run to take that power somewhere – still a fight in Southern California.

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