Launching Innovation and Success 
Tác giả :
California’s Ivanpah concentrated solar power plant has underdelivered on its energy contracts and now has a year to shape up, or it could be shut down.


One of the most ambitious solar energy projects on the planet is in trouble. The $2.2 billion Ivanpah concentrated solar power facility in California has fallen well short of its expected power output and now has a year to get itself back on track, or it risks being forced to shut down.


The California Public Utilities Commission granted a reprieve to the plant on Thursday, preventing it from going into default on its contract with Pacific Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison.


Built with great fanfare by BrightSource Energy, NRG Energy, and Google, Ivanpah has been dogged by criticism from environmentalists since construction began. The plant uses thousands of mirrors to concentrate the sun’s energy and heat water to produce steam and generate electricity. But since it came online in 2014, the power it produces has been much more expensive than electricity from solar plants that get their energy from photovoltaic cells, to say nothing of power from natural gas.



Once considered a high-tech rival to solar photovoltaic, concentrated solar power has fallen from favor in recent years as the cost of photovoltaic panels has plummeted. Last year BrightSource canceled a planned concentrated solar power plant in Inyo County, California.


Concentrated solar has one key advantage over solar photovoltaic, however: coupled with energy storage systems, such as heated molten-salt tanks, it can provide power even when the sun’s not shining. A 2013 study from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory found that the value of concentrated solar plus thermal storage could be $32 to $40 per megawatt-hour higher than that of a photovoltaic plant in 2020. BrightSource rival SolarReserve is building a 110-megawatt concentrated solar plant in Nevada that includes molten-salt storage, and a similar plant in South Africa.

Source: technologyreview
Góp ý
Họ và tên: *  
Email: *  
Tiêu đề: *  
Mã xác nhận:
RadEditor - HTML WYSIWYG Editor. MS Word-like content editing experience thanks to a rich set of formatting tools, dropdowns, dialogs, system modules and built-in spell-check.
RadEditor's components - toolbar, content area, modes and modules
   
Toolbar's wrapper  
Content area wrapper
RadEditor's bottom area: Design, Html and Preview modes, Statistics module and resize handle.
It contains RadEditor's Modes/views (HTML, Design and Preview), Statistics and Resizer
Editor Mode buttonsStatistics moduleEditor resizer
 
 
RadEditor's Modules - special tools used to provide extra information such as Tag Inspector, Real Time HTML Viewer, Tag Properties and other.
   
 *
                   sunnyweb.org                           
Copyright © 2014, Khoa Cơ khí Động lực
Trường Đại Học Sư Phạm Kỹ Thuật TP. Hồ Chí Minh

Địa chỉ: 01 Võ Văn Ngân, Quận Thủ Đức, Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh.
Điện thoại: (+84 - 8) 3896 4921 - 7 221 223/8340   E-mail: kckdl@hcmute.edu.vn

Truy cập tháng:24,241

Tổng truy cập:55,184

 

   Copyright © 2014, Khoa Đào tạo Quốc tế
   Trường Đại Học Sư Phạm Kỹ Thuật TP. Hồ Chí Minh

   Địa chỉ: 01 Võ Văn Ngân, Quận Thủ Đức, Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh.
   Điện thoại: (+84 - 8) 3896 4921 - 7 221 223/8340   E-mail: fie@hcmute.edu.vn