150 kW Solar Stirling Engines Power Plant
| lab, thermal power station
USA /
New Mexico /
Carnuel /
World
/ USA
/ New Mexico
/ Carnuel
World / United States / New Mexico
lab, thermal power station
World's largest solar installation to use Stirling engine technology
20-year purchase agreement between Southern California Edison and Stirling Energy Systems, Inc. will result in 20,000+ dish array, covering 4,500 acres, and capable of generating 500 MW -- more electricity than all other present U.S. solar projects combined.
The agreement includes an option to expand the project to 850 MW.
Initially, Stirling would build a one-MW test facility using 40 of the company’s 37-foot-diameter dish assemblies. (Each dish generates 25 kilowatts.) This phase is slated to be completed in the first quarter of 2007. One of the 40-unit arrays capable of a 1 MW output, will be dubbed a "solar power group" and will be the basis of modular calculations for future installations.
Subsequently, the 20,000-dish array is to be constructed near Victorville, California, during a four-year period, starting in early 2008. If Edison opts for the additional 350 MW installation, that will take two more years, and will bring the total number of panels to 34,000.
Although Stirling dish technology has been successfully tested for 20 years, the SCE-Stirling project represents its first major application in the commercial electricity-generation field. Experimental models of the Stirling dish technology have undergone more than 26,000 hours of successful solar operation. A six-dish model Stirling power project is currently operating at the Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
However, this isn't the first commercial application of Stirling engine technology. For instance, Swedish submarines use Stirling engines for propulsion.
20-year purchase agreement between Southern California Edison and Stirling Energy Systems, Inc. will result in 20,000+ dish array, covering 4,500 acres, and capable of generating 500 MW -- more electricity than all other present U.S. solar projects combined.
The agreement includes an option to expand the project to 850 MW.
Initially, Stirling would build a one-MW test facility using 40 of the company’s 37-foot-diameter dish assemblies. (Each dish generates 25 kilowatts.) This phase is slated to be completed in the first quarter of 2007. One of the 40-unit arrays capable of a 1 MW output, will be dubbed a "solar power group" and will be the basis of modular calculations for future installations.
Subsequently, the 20,000-dish array is to be constructed near Victorville, California, during a four-year period, starting in early 2008. If Edison opts for the additional 350 MW installation, that will take two more years, and will bring the total number of panels to 34,000.
Although Stirling dish technology has been successfully tested for 20 years, the SCE-Stirling project represents its first major application in the commercial electricity-generation field. Experimental models of the Stirling dish technology have undergone more than 26,000 hours of successful solar operation. A six-dish model Stirling power project is currently operating at the Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
However, this isn't the first commercial application of Stirling engine technology. For instance, Swedish submarines use Stirling engines for propulsion.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 34°57'55"N 106°30'35"W
- Kirtland Air Force Base (ABQ/KABQ) 15 km
- Los Alamos National Laboratory 104 km
- Air Force Propulsion Laboratory 1021 km
- SSFL - Test AREA THREE 1120 km
- SSFL - Test AREA TWO 1120 km
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Site 300 1382 km
- Sandia National Laboratory/Livermore Gunnery Range (site) 1395 km
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory/NAS Livermore (site) 1396 km
- SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory 1438 km
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 1445 km
- National Solar Thermal Test Facility (NSTTF) 0.4 km
- Base Exercise Evaluation Skills Training Area 1.8 km
- Open Detonation Treatment Facility 3.4 km
- Manzano Weapons Storage Entrance Area 4.3 km
- Starfire Optical Range - Kirtland AFB, NM 4.3 km
- Manzano Base 5.7 km
- Tijeras Arroyo Golf Course (Military) 6.4 km
- DOE Live-Fire Range 7.2 km
- Sandia National Labs Aerial Cable Site 9 km
- Manzano Mountians 24 km
National Solar Thermal Test Facility (NSTTF)
Base Exercise Evaluation Skills Training Area
Open Detonation Treatment Facility
Manzano Weapons Storage Entrance Area
Starfire Optical Range - Kirtland AFB, NM
Manzano Base
Tijeras Arroyo Golf Course (Military)
DOE Live-Fire Range
Sandia National Labs Aerial Cable Site
Manzano Mountians
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