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PALMDALE'S PURSUIT
OF POWER! |
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Palmdale Officials Tour Kramer Junction Solar Power PlantPalmdale city officials, including Councilman Steve Hofbauer, Mayor Jim Ledford, City Manager Steve Williams and others, joined by Inland Energy staff, our power plant consultants, were given a rare behind the scenes tour of the 30 Megawatt Kramer Junction solar power facility. Below is a schematic of the Kramer Juntion 30+ megawatt solar co-generation facility, located in the Mojave Desert. |
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Solar collector tube, viewed from the edge, carry superheated liquid. |
Acres of precision ground solar mirrors concentrate solar rays on tubes, like the one shown on the left, carrying super heated liquid to the steam transfer tanks, next photo. |
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Steam transfer units, where solar super heated fluid circulates in water tank to generate the steam to turn the turbines. |
Steve shown in the Master Control Room, where the solar tracking for the mirror arrays and steam/turbine plant operations are controlled. |
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Steve (2nd from left) with plant managers, FLP executives, and staff from Inland Energy, our power consultants in front of a mirror array. |
Steve joins Florida Light and Power executive, the Kramer Junction plant operators, and Mayor Ledford. at the base of a mirror array. |
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related news story |
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Power Plant Moving Ahead PALMDALE - Palmdale officials said Tuesday they have reached terms with Lockheed Martin for the purchase of a site adjacent to Air Force Plant 42 for a future power plant. The two sides reached an agreement regarding the sale of the 640 acres near Sierra Highway and Avenue M. City Manager Steve Williams said he could not immediately disclose the sale price, citing documents that need to be finalized. The City Council will vote March 21 on the transaction. Williams and Councilman Steve Hofbauer, in separate interviews during breaks in a Washington, D.C., lobbying trip, confirmed the agreement on the sale. Hofbauer said a preliminary environmental study has also been conducted on the site and that there are no issues that would stop the project. ÒWeÕre moving forward,Ó Hofbauer said. ÒWeÕre going to be able to go to the state with our application and say thereÕs no question about where weÕre going. WeÕve got the site booked up and thereÕs no endangered species there.Ó Hofbauer said city officials met with U.S. Department of Energy officials to discuss the project. Among the officials was Alexander Karsner, assistant secretary of energy efficiency and renewable energy. Hofbauer said the city got positive feedback on the project and received information on possible federal grants involving the proposed solar energy portion of the plant and on possible investment tax credits. ÒI feel better knowing we wonÕt have people saying this is pie-in-the-sky,Ó Hofbauer said. The property is owned by Lockheed Martin Properties, the corporationÕs real estate subsidiary, and had been earmarked for development as a possible business park. The Lockheed site is attractive because itÕs close to the aerospace companies at Air Force Plant 42 and Lockheed MartinÕs Plant 10, which the city envisions as the major users of the power from the plant. The site also has a single owner, simplifying its acquisition. The property was one of four considered by Palmdale as for the power plant. City officials have declined to identify the other three sites. City officials are working with a consultant, Inland Energy Inc., to secure permits to build a 500-megawatt power plant they say would provide the city with reliable, more-affordable energy. It is expected to take about two years and cost as much as $5.5 million to secure those permits. The city plans to seek permits for a plant that would operate two 165-megawatt gas-fired turbines and a steam turbine capable of generating 170 megawatts. The plant would be capable of providing energy for a city of 400,000. It is estimated that constructing such a plant would cost about $300 million. During the two years of seeking permits, city analysts studied various ways to permit the plant to best serve PalmdaleÕs interests. Possibilities include forming a municipal utility such as those operating in Los Angeles, Glendale and Burbank; assigning the permit to a company; or selling the permit outright. |
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