NewEnergyNews More: BREAKTHROUGH TUBES IN SUN DEALS

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  • Sunday, August 1, 2010

    BREAKTHROUGH TUBES IN SUN DEALS

    Solyndra Gets Biggest Chunk of SCE’s 250 MW Distributed Solar Project
    Susan Kraemer, July 31, 2010 (Clean Technica)

    "Solyndra was the very first of the renewable energy companies funded through the…Department of Energy under Secretary Chu…[A] $535 million loan [guarantee]…[allowed Solyndra to] build a factory to make its innovative cylindrical CIGS thin film solar modules. That factory is now due online this fall…

    "Now Southern California Edison (SCE) has awarded Solyndra…a bundle of 20-year power purchase agreements to build about 16 MW of rooftop PV systems distributed atop 15 commercial or industrial buildings in Southern California."


    Installing a rack of Solyndra tubes. (click to enlarge)

    "Solyndra’s subsidiary, Photon Solar will build the Solyndra systems, the largest being a 3 MW array on a commercial or industrial building…Seven of its 15 sites will be a megawatt or more. The start-up just completed their largest array to date, a 704 kW system…The company expects to triple its manufacturing output once the first 250MW of capacity ramps up. It has almost a billion in VC funding for its innovative easy-install tubular CIGS thin film modules.

    "SCE is the most renewably-powered of California’s three major utilities, and closest (at 18%) to reaching the first [part of its renewable energy standard (RES)] goal of 20% by 2010…by utilizing distributed rooftop power in multiple small projects, because these can come on line faster – being easier to permit than larger (but more efficient) desert projects…[T]he first of Solyndra/Photon Solar’s 15 mini projects will be online in six months, by January 2011, with the remaining sites plugging in by the end of the each of the subsequent three months."


    704 kilowatts, Solyndra's biggest installation so far. (click to enlarge)

    "By contrast, utility-scale desert solar projects take so many years and millions of dollars in environmental compliance, that it is uncertain if they are ever going to get permitted…The three utilities are allowed to include contracts to buy distributed renewable power to meet the RES…

    "Of all the successful bidders for the 31 solar energy power purchase agreements for the first 50 MW approved with SCE, 26 are rooftop systems for a total of 37 MW. The remaining 23 MW are spread among 5 ground mounted systems. These 50 MW in distributed rooftop solar arrays is the first phase of a 250 MW project for SCE."

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