SolarCity Corporation (San Mateo, California, U.S.) and Lend Lease Corporation Ltd. (Millers Point, Australia) announced that construction has begun on a 4 MW solar photovoltaic (PV) project at Joint Base Pearl-Harbon Hickam near Honolulu, Hawaii.

The initial phase will involve the installation of PV systems on 600 roofs on the base. SolarCity will engineer, install and maintain the systems, and sell the electricity generated to Hawaiian Electric Company Inc. (Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.) through a 20-year power purchase agreement.

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A United Nations report found that worldwide spending on green energy increased by 32% in 2010 thanks to lower prices, larger availability and tighter regulations within certain countries requiring increased renewable energy. In total, there was $211 billion in 2010 investments in clean energy across the planet, which the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) says was led by Chinese wind farms and German solar roofs. The report also noted that developing countries out-spent developed nations in renewable energy investments — with $72 billion versus $70 billion.

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El Hierro The World’s First Renewable Energy Island

by Daniel C Jones

El Hierro, the smallest and southern-most island of the Canaries, made headlines recently after it announced plans to become the world’s first island to eradicate its carbon footprint and run completely off 100% renewable energy sources. The Huffington Post reported how El Hierro will be powered by an 11.5 MW wind farm, 11.3 MW of hydroelectric power and a whole bunch of solar thermal collectors and grid-connected photovoltaics. The fact that oil will no longer be transported to this remote location alone will offset 18,200 tons of carbon dioxide. These are undeniably impressive statistics and the project represents a wonderful opportunity for Swiss-Swedish power giant, ABB. Plans call for this ambitious project to be completed by the end of 2011 and will cost $87 million. However there is one problem with the claim that El Hierro is “the world’s first renewable energy island” – it isn’t.

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Concentrating Solar Power Gemasolar plant supplies 24 hours of uninterrupted power to Spanish grid

At the end of 2010 workers put the final touches on an enormous structure in Southern Spain; a concrete tower, 140 meters tall, surrounded by a field of 2,650 large mirrors, each roughly 10 meters by 10 meters, covering a total of 18 hectares. The 19.9 MW solar tower plant, surrounded by semi-arid cropland in the province of Seville, Spain, may be remembered as the first of a design that is replicated across multiple continents, transforming solar power from an “alternative” to a mainstream technology.

Construction of the Gemasolar plant. Torresol Energy Investment S.A.

It is not the field of mirrors or central receiver that makes this plant groundbreaking, but rather what passes through the receiver, and fills the 14 meter high, 36 meter wide tanks at the base of the plant.

Molten salt tanks and turbine building at the base of the Gemasolar plant. Image SENER Group

The Gemasolar plant is the first commercial-scale plant to use molten salts, heated to a temperature of 565 degrees Centigrade, as a thermal receiver and to provide 15 hours of molten salt storage.

The implication of this technology is enormous. The Gemasolar plant not only supplies power during sunny periods, but as needed, up to 24 hours per day, without the considerable expense of battery storage.

It is for this reason that the Gemasolar concentrating solar power (CSP) plant, owned by Torresol Energy Investment S.A. (Getxo, Spain), a joint venture of SENER Group (Getxo, Spain) and Masdar (Abu Dhabi, U.A.E.), is Solar Server’s June 2010 solar energy system of the month.

 

Solar and intermittency

A central limitation of solar technologies has been that they typically only deliver power when the sun is shining. This is not entirely problematic, as in many regions daily increases in electricity demand is similar to the output of solar power.

Yet this does limit the maximum amount of solar that can be deployed without additional storage, which can be prohibitively expensive, or deploying additional “on-demand” generation, usually natural gas.

More on this subject can be found in Solar Server’s report on energy storage and solar power

However, due to the use of molten salt storage for overnight periods, Torresol Energy’s Gemasolar plant is the first solar plant in the world which can supply a flexible amount of power on demand 24 hours per day, similar to a natural gas plant.

Graph of energy production at the Gemasolar plant. Image courtesy of Torresol Energy Investment S.A.


The time comes for CSP

Though a large number of the world’s operational CSP plants have been built in the last five years, the idea is not new. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) built the first CSP plant, a solar tower design similar to Gemasolar, in California in 1981. However, after a series of plants were built in California’s Mojave Desert, the technology was largely abandoned for more than a decade.

In the beginning of the 21st century a new interest in solar technology led a number of companies to investigate CSP; however, few new plants were built until the passage of revisions to Spain’s feed-in tariff in 2007, which brought a flood of new CSP plants. Today Spain hosts the world’s largest operational CSP capacity.

SENER Ingeniería & Sistemas, the engineering arm of the SENER Group, became involved of concentrating solar power in 2001, providing construction services for the Solar Tres CSP plant.

 

Torresol Energy and the molten salt concept

SENER also provided engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) services for the Andasol 1 plant, a parabolic trough plant which was the first CSP plant to use molten salt storage when commissioned in November 2008.

In 2006 the company launched project Gemasolar, investigating the possibility of thermal storage with CSP. During that year, SENER built an experimental unit in the Almeria Solar Platform to test the solar tower design with a molten salt receiver.

In March 2008, SENER and Masdar formed Torresol Energy to advance CSP plants globally, and SENER transferred Project Gemasolar to the new company.

SENER provides technology for Torresol Energy, whose purpose is to develop molten salt CSP globally, starting with the Gemasolar plant.

 

Construction of Gemasolar: making the idea real

After signing a project contract in late 2008, Torresol Energy began work on the Gemasolar plant.

The Gemasolar plant under construction in 2009, before the installation of the field of heliostats

Image Credit: Torresol Energy Investment S.A.

 

SENER was responsible for construction, a process that took a total of 29 months, including seven months to assemble the field of mirrors, (heliostats). The central tower was constructed using a sliding form casing.

“Obviously, constructing 2500 mobile heliostats, each heliostat having 110 m2 of silvered glass, a 140 m concrete tower, tanks to keep 8500 metric tons of molten salts, etc., is not an easy task,” notes Torresol Technical Director of Operations and Maintenance Santiago Arias Alonso.

“But SENER has achieved a very high experience in designing, purchasing, constructing and commissioning all the components.”

Torresol states that the project was financed with a EUR 171 million (USD 247 million) loan by several private banks, led by the Popular Bank.

 

Commissioning: lighting up Andalusia

In early 2011, Gemasolar began running on a test basis, and was officially commissioned on May 1st, 2011.

Electricity generated by the plant is sent via high tension line to a local substation, on an electric grid owned by Endesa S.A. (Madrid, Spain), for distribution mainly in Spain’s Andalusia region.

Torresol Energy notes that the daily profile of Spanish electricity demand has two peaks, with the second falling between 8 PM in the winter and 10 PM in the summer, after the sun has set. Due to its molten salt storage, the Gemasolar plant can supply power to meet both peaks.

 

Details of molten salt and a tower design at Gemasolar

While SENER is involved in the construction of 15 CSP plants, the Gemasolar plant is its first to use a heat storage system at greater than 560 degrees centigrade.

The system uses a total of 8,500 tons of sodium and potassium nitrate salts, which are kept in a molten state. Torresol Energy states that the salt absorbs 95% of the heat energy from sunlight in the central receiver, after which the salts are sent to a storage tank, and a portion is used to generate steam via a heat exchanger.

The direct heating of the molten salt is different from previous designs, such as the Andasol 1 plant, based on a parabolic trough design, which use thermal oil as a receiver, and then transfer the heat to the molten salt solution. Torresol Energy notes the efficiency advantage of removing one step of heat transfer.

 

Advantages and efficiencies of molten salt CSP

Torresol Energy states that tower power CSP systems offer advantages over parabolic trough CSP, noting that Gemasolar includes no mobile piping system, no swivel joints, no thermal oil and no potential fire or spillage risks. Additionally, the concentration of fluids in a small area leads to lower thermal losses and maintenance costs.

Torresol Energy also notes technical advantages of the storage system, stating that short bursts of power, as are caused by the passing of clouds in systems without storage, shorten the working life of turbines. The company also states that incorporating the heat storage system reduces load variations and increases turbine efficiency.

Because a large amount of the molten salt is stored, the output capacity of the turbine is smaller than would be expected from a plant of its size. The thermal receiver has a 120 MW-thermal capacity, however the plant uses a 19.9 MW turbine. Torresol Energy expects the plant to produce 110,000 MWh of electricity annually.

 

The future: molten salt goes global?

Torresol Energy officials say that the idea of molten salt storage has definitely caught on in the CSP industry.

“Four years ago, when I was working at SENER in the molten salt storage system for Andasol 1, all our competitors considered that ‘we were nuts’ by trying to store and deliver the energy,” recalls Santiago Arias Alonso. “Currently, all our competitors are testing or trying to design molten salt storage systems.”

For its part, Torresol Energy seeks to build more plants with molten salt storage in multiple locations around the world. The company is currently developing two molten salt storage parabolic trough CSP plants, the Valle 1 and Valle 2, in Spain.

If solar and other renewable energy technologies are to replace fossil fuels and nuclear power, they must be able to generate power 24 hours per day without requiring overly expensive storage. The Gemasolar plant shows that this can be done at a commercial scale. The future is here.

Source: solarserver
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Spanish Government selects SolarReserve's concentrating solar thermal project in competitive tender

Termosolar Alcazar, a 50/50 joint venture between SolarReserve (Santa Monica, California, U.S.), a U.S. developer of utility-scale solar power projects and Preneal S.A. (Madrid), a Spanish developer of renewable energy projects, on June 27th, 2011 announced the Spanish government’s award of tender for the venture’s 50 megawatt (MW) solar thermal plant to be built in Alcazar de San Juan.


 

Molten salt CSP tower technology

The Termosolar Alcazar Power Project will contribute to Spain’s renewable energy generation through new highly innovative, fully dispatchable molten salt concentrating solar power (CSP) tower technology. Termosolar Alcazar was awarded this tender through a competitive bid process based on delivered electricity price, technology innovation and the advanced state of the project development activities.

 

Solar power for 70,000 homes in the region

The Termosolar Alcazar Power Project will generate enough clean, reliable energy to power 70,000 homes in the region and help Spain achieve the EU Climate & Energy objectives, which include: reduction in greenhouse gas emissions to below 20 percent of 1990 levels, 20 percent of the nation’s energy consumption from renewable resources and a 20 percent reduction in primary energy use compared to projected levels.

 

4,000 jobs in Spain and more than 2,500 jobs in the United States to be created

The project will incorporate significant Spanish and U.S. equipment and materials and engineering creating an estimated 4,000 jobs in Spain and more than 2,500 jobs in the United States during the two year construction period.

 

Energy storage to deploy electricity on-demand

The project will utilize SolarReserve’s utility scale molten salt solar power tower technology developed by Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne, a subsidiary of United Technologies, which features integrated energy storage to deploy electricity on-demand, day or night, providing the same operating stability, reliability and dispatchability of a conventional power generator while utilizing dry cooling. The characteristics of the technology along with its capability to reduce the price of power were critical attributes in this tender process.

In November of 2009, the Termosolar Alcazar Power Project received a “Declaracion de Impacto” from the government of Castilla-La Mancha, the key environmental permit necessary for the construction of the plant.

 

Source: solarserver
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Pierrejean’s Solar-Powered LOU+LOU Yacht Cruises the Seven Seas

A new yacht designed by Pierrejean Design Studios is taking green technology to the high seas. The LOU+LOU uses solar panels and a hybrid technology called “electrical motorization pools” to cruise completely silently up to 8 knots with a top speed of 25 knots. The technology is still in the experimental stage and is under wraps for now, but we love the idea that a yacht designer would create their own green technology for a custom craft like this one.

The LOU+LOU focuses on relaxation and tranquility inspired by nature: the five-deck boat is designed to be a floating spa that can endure a wide range of climates – from the hot Persian Gulf to cold northern temperatures. Other details we love include an aquarium integrated into the swimming pool and large underwater windows that link passengers directly to the sea itself.

 

Source: inhabitat
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Cambridge, MA, USA SunMaxx Solar is proud to announce the successful installation of SunMaxx TitanPower Plus-SU2 flat plate collectors at Harvard University’s Harvard Yard. The solar system was built atop the Canaday Hall building as part of a larger system that provides hot water to all of the buildings within Harvard Yard. Installed,engineered and designed by the SunMaxx Solar authorized installer LittleFoot Energy Corporation, who served as the prime contractor on the project, the collector array will provide approximately 773 MMBTU/year, which is an estimated 30% solar fraction.

 

The more than 3,200 square feet of SunMaxx TitanPower Plus-SU2 flat plate collectors atop the three buildings of Canaday Hall is part of a solar thermal and steam tunnel heat-recovery project that won the New England Association of Energy Engineers best renewable energy thermal project for 2010. This hybrid heating system also collects exhaust heat from a steam tunnel under the dormitory.  The heat captured from the flat plate collectors and the steam tunnel runs through a system of glycol-filled pipes, which feeds into a 1,000 gallon buffer tank in Canaday’s basement. This preheats the water in the buffer tank to 130 degrees before the water is pumped to the buildings around Harvard Yard.

Harvard University, a private, Ivy League university based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is the oldest university in the United States, and a known leader among universities world-wide. Dedicated to producing highly educated, socially conscious graduates destined to serve as leaders of today, the university works to lead by example and recently established an aggressive sustainability objective to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and overall carbon footprint. The stated goal is to reduce GHG emissions 30% by 2016, a challenging objective for any organization.

SunMaxx Solar congratulates Harvard University on being a forerunner in not only creating a more energy efficient system through their use of solar powered systems, but also in educating the surrounding community about the benefits of clean, renewable energy.

Source: renewableenergyworld

 

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The Australian Government has selected the AREVA Solar (Mountain View, Calif.), CS Energy and Wind Prospect CWP consortium’s “Solar Dawn” as the preferred solar thermal power project in Round 1 of the Australian Government’s Solar Flagships Program.

Solar Dawn is a proposed 250 megawatt (MW) solar thermal gas hybrid power plant and will be the largest plant of its kind in the world when completed. The Australian Commonwealth and Queensland Governments also announced their commitment to contribute USD 464 million and USD 75 million, respectively, to the project.

Compact Linear Fresnel Reflector solar thermal technology: AREVA Solar's Kimberlina Solar Power Plant in Bakersfield, California

Power plants to use Compact Linear Fresnel Reflector solar thermal technology

Solar Dawn will be located in South West Queensland, near CS Energy’s recently announced 44MW Kogan Creek Solar Boost Project. Like Solar Dawn, Kogan Creek Solar Boost will also use AREVA Solar’s Compact Linear Fresnel Reflector (CLFR) solar thermal technology.

As a solar thermal gas hybrid power plant, Solar Dawn will combine AREVA Solar’s CLFR solar steam generators with a gas boiler back-up system, giving it the ability to deliver around the clock power.

The Solar Dawn consortium will now work closely with key government, commercial and community stakeholders to finalize all relevant approvals and financing arrangements, as well as engineering, procurement, construction, operations and maintenance contracts, by the end of 2011.

 

Another significant milestone in the creation of a world-class clean energy industry in Australia

AREVA Renewables CEO Anil Srivastava commended the Australian and Queensland Governments on their vision for a low-carbon economy and their investment in this unprecedented utility-scale solar power project.

“The Solar Flagships Program demonstrates the Australian and Queensland Governments’ support for renewable energy. This announcement represents another significant milestone in the creation of a world-class clean energy industry in Australia,” he said.

 

Hybrid design will deliver energy even when the sun isn’t shining

“Solar Dawn will be an international showcase for the nation, using Australia’s abundant solar resource and AREVA Solar’s Australian-pioneered Compact Linear Fresnel Reflector technology to combine zero-carbon solar energy with a low-emission, gas boiler back-up system to efficiently produce clean, reliable power to meet Australia’s growing energy demand.”

“Once completed, the proposed project will be the largest of its kind and one of the most environmentally responsible power production plants in the world. Its innovative, yet simple hybrid design will deliver energy as needed, even when the sun isn’t shining,” he added.

The Solar Flagships Program aims to provide the foundation for large-scale, grid-connected solar power and accelerate the commercialization of this energy source in Australia. It is a key component of the Australian Government’s USD 5 billion Clean Energy Initiative.

For more information about the Solar Dawn power project, please visit http://solardawn.com.au/

 

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The Solar Millennium Group is planning up to four solar thermal power plants at Blythe with a total power of 1,000 megawatts

At a festive celebration on Friday, June 18th, 2011, US Secretary of the Interior, Ken Salazar, California’s Governor Jerry Brown and Joseph DeConinck, the mayor of Blythe, broke ground on the Blythe concentrating solar power plant (CSP) facility together with representatives of Solar Millennium (Erlangen, Germany) and Solar Trust of America.

Early construction works for the first two power plants with a net capacity of 242 megawatts (MW) each, commenced at the end of 2010.

The Solar Millennium Group is planning up to four solar thermal power plants at Blythe with a total power of 1,000 megawatts

Solar Power for more than 300,000 American households

Solar Trust of America, the American company unit within the Solar Millennium Group, plans to build up to four solar-thermal power plants with an overall capacity of about 1,000 megawatt at this location. The four power plants combined are to supply enough electricity for more than 300,000 American households and thus save some two million tons of carbon dioxide emissions per year. The fact that the Californian Mojave desert is among the world’s best solar energy locations was proven during the ceremony, which featured an outdoor temperature of 113 °F (45 °C).

 

A major milestone in the U.S. renewable energy economy

“Breaking ground on what will be the world’s largest solar power project is a major milestone in our nation’s renewable energy economy and shows that the United States intends to compete and lead in the technologies of the future,” said Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar. “This project shows in a real way how harnessing our own renewable resources can create good jobs here at home and contribute to our nation’s energy security.”

 

Overall investment amounts to roughly USD 2.8 billion

Dr. Christoph Wolff, CEO of Solar Millennium AG, adds, “Blythe marks not only a milestone for Solar Millennium, but also for the successful history of solar energy in general. For the first time, we are utilizing solar energy with capacities equaling those of nuclear power or major coal-fired power plants. I am pleased that we are able to make our contribution to reaching California’s ambitious climate targets as well as supporting the local economy. I would like to thank all those persons, who contributed to this achievement through their unceasing commitment and trust”. The overall investment sum for the first two solar-thermal power plants projected in Blythe amounts to roughly USD 2.8 billion.

 

USD 2.1 billion loan guarantee

Only a few weeks ago, US Secretary of Energy, Dr. Steven Chu, had offered the project company the conditional commitment for a USD 2.1 billion loan guarantee. The loan guarantees are the precondition for financing some 75% of construction costs of the first two 242 MW power plants with borrowed capital. The conditional commitment defines the covenants to be met by the applicant in order to receive the loan guarantees granted by the US Department of Energy (DOE). The Executive Board of Solar Millennium assumes that the Company will manage to meet all of these conditions, particularly the financial close for both power plants, by late summer this year.

Solar Trust of America expects to create some 1,000 direct jobs during the construction phase and several thousand indirect jobs through supplier relations. The two power plants are to be connected to the grid by 2014. The final building permit for all of the four power plants projected at the Blythe location had already been granted in autumn 2010.

The electricity generated in Blythe 1 and 2 will be purchased by the US utility Southern California Edison (SCE). As such, SCE meets the requirements by the state of California to increase the share of renewable energies in total power production. Since the beginning of the year, the Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) force the Californian utilities to cover 33% of power generation with renewable energies by 2020.

 

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California

California, USA — This law, called the California Renewable Energy Resources Act, obligates all California electricity providers to obtain at least 33% of their energy from renewable resources by the year 2020. This requirement constitutes the most aggressive renewable portfolio standard in the country.

This article provides an overview of SB X 1-2, and examines its path to implementation.

When SB X 1-2 takes effect, it will be the latest in a series of California laws enacted over the last 5 years which are designed to radically change the State’s energy profile, reduce its greenhouse gas emissions, and reinforce its position as a global environmental leader. At the same time, these measures are intended to attract capital to the State, drive economic activity and produce jobs here at home. These laws include California’s landmark AB 32 (2006), which obligates the State to decrease its emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, and SB 1368 (2008) which prohibits the importation of electricity from plants failing to meet certain environmental standards.

The passage of SB X 1-2 is clearly a triumph for California. However, the law is also painfully complicated due to its competing priorities: on one hand, achieving the 33% target (with the intention that the bulk of projects will be generated in California); and on the other hand, minimizing rate impacts.

In an effort to resolve these conflicting interests, SB X 1-2 employs tortuous formulae that generally favor in-state development (but allow some importation of out-of-state renewables), and try to mitigate rate effects by:

1.      requiring limits to be placed on the cost of renewables;

2.      providing for waivers and exemptions for providers unable to reach the targets; and

3.      seeking to streamline permitting for renewables projects and transmission infrastructure.

The result is a dense document which is sometimes hard to decipher.

SB X 1-2 covers all electricity providers, including investor owned utilities (IOUs) and publicly owned utilities (POUs). The law contains interim targets of 20% by 2013 and 25% by 2016. It also dictates that in order to qualify, the power must come from a “renewable electrical generation facility”, which means a plant that meets certain criteria.

The facility must use biomass, solar thermal, photovoltaic, wind, geothermal, fuel cells using renewable fuels, small hydro (under 30 MW), digester gas, trash conversion (not utilizing combustion), landfill gas, ocean wave, ocean thermal, or tidal current. The facility must also be either located in California (or near the border of California) with the first point of connection to the transmission network of a California balancing authority (CBA) or have its first point of interconnection to the transmission network outside California. But it must be within the Western Electricity Coordinating Council area, and satisfy certain other conditions.

The statute grandfathers contracts (including those for out-of-state power) entered before June 1, 2010. Further, SB X 1-2 contains numerous statements that embrace out-of-state power: “This electricity may be generated anywhere in the interconnected grid that includes many states, and areas of both Canada and Mexico.”

However, SB X 1-2 then presents Section 399.16, which imposes a “loading order” that requires each provider to attain a balanced portfolio of renewables under three categories called buckets:

1.      Products that have a first point of interconnection with a CBA (or with distribution facilities serving a CBA), or which are scheduled into a CBA, or which have an agreement to dynamically transfer electricity to a CBA

2.      Firmed and shaped products scheduled into a CBA

3.      Other products (including unbundled renewable energy credits)

We will refer to the power under paragraph (1) above as “California Content” and under paragraph (3) as “REC Content.”

Under Section 399.16, each provider must ensure that by the end of 2013, no less than 50% of its renewables consist of California Content, with such percentage increasing to 65% by the end of 2016, and 75% thereafter. Also, each provider must ensure that by the end of 2013, no more than 25% of its renewables portfolio comprises REC Content, with such percentage declining to 15% by the end of 2016, and 10% thereafter.

In essence, then, starting in 2017, all providers must procure no less than 75% of their renewables from California Content and no more than 10% from unbundled RECs, with the remainder from firmed and shaped products.

The loading order in Section 399.16 impacts out-of-state facilities which must now revisit their sales strategies in California.

The law’s 33% by 2020 mandate, coupled with its slant towards in-state production, make cost containment a paramount consideration, especially since in-state development is generally more expensive and time-consuming than out-of-state construction. SB X 1-2 addresses that challenge in a number of ways:

First, the law requires the Department of Fish and Game to establish an, “internal division” to perform “planning and environmental compliance services with priority given to [renewables] project.” Whether this division can simplify permitting processes and overcome the growing misuse of environmental regulations to derail renewables projects remains to be seen. What is certain is that California must reduce regulatory impediments while safeguarding environmental protections.

Second, the statute recognizes that new transmissions will be needed: “New and modified electric transmission facilities may be necessary to facilitate the state achieving its… targets.” This is a tacit acknowledgement because while distributed generation must play an essential part, it alone cannot satisfy the law’s objectives. Consistent with the foregoing, the statute requires the CPUC to determine applications for Certificates of Public Convenience and Necessity within 18 months. It also admonishes the California Independent System Operator IOUs and POUs to work cooperatively to interconnect renewables to the grid in an efficient and cost-effective manner.

Finally, the statute requires the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to establish a limitation for each seller on procurement expenditures for renewables. In developing the cost limitation, the CPUC must avoid “disproportionate rate impacts” and must “ensure rates are just and reasonable, and are not significantly affected by the procurement requirements of this article.”

The governing bodies of POUs are accorded the right to adopt similar cost control measures. The law also provides that the CPUC shall waive enforcement as to a provider if it finds certain circumstances including inadequate transmission, permitting hurdles, or insufficiency of renewables. Additionally, a seller is given the right to reject contracts or build facilities beyond what is possible under the cost limitation. In other words, if resources or transmission prove lacking or regulatory issues arise, a provider may obtain a waiver or assert an exemption.

SB X 1-2 clearly sets a high bar. However, in positioning the 33% standard, with the added slant in favor of in-state development, SB X 1-2 must also grapple with the downside of its ambitions – namely, increased rates. The success of the law will ultimately depend on whether it has struck the right balance, and whether the provisions to contain costs, accelerate transmission, and streamline development will work in practice. It will also depend upon whether the plethora of clauses that authorize waivers and exemptions will be invoked, thus jeopardizing the realization of SB X 1-2’s laudable objectives.


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