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110 mw Solar for Florida

Page history last edited by PBworks 15 years, 9 months ago

FPL Unveils Plans for Three Florida Solar Plants

 

US: June 27, 2008

 

 

MIAMI - FPL Group Inc unveiled plans Wednesday to build 110 megawatts of solar-power generating plants in Florida as part of a long-term goal to ramp up its renewable energy portfolio, the company's chief executive said.

 

 

The new plants would take FPL more than a third of the way to a goal announced last year to build a total of 300-MW of solar capacity in Florida, and the company is more bullish than ever on the prospects for solar, Chief Executive Lew Hay told Reuters in an interview.

Florida Power & Light, an FPL subsidiary, said it would build a 75-MW solar-thermal plant at an existing FPL site in Florida's Martin County, and two photovoltaic plants, one of 25 MW in DeSoto County and one of 10 MW at the Kennedy Space Center on the east coast.

 

The projects, which have not yet been approved by state regulators, carry a US$688 million price tag and would provide power enough for 35,000 customers, the utility said.

 

"Costs are coming down and they're coming down more rapidly than I would have thought," Hay said.

 

Coupled with the skyrocketing cost of conventional power-plant fuels like oil and natural gas and the rising price of commodities to build such power plants, solar is becoming more competitive, Hay said.

 

The company, which bills itself as the top US producer of wind power, has other solar projects on the drawing board, he said.

 

"We've been, both in Florida and the southwestern parts of the United States, locking up land, usually through option agreements and in some cases buying it outright, for future projects," he said.

 

Hay said FPL is investigating the feasibility of putting solar panels on homeowners' rooftops but currently does not believe it makes sense. Centralized, commercial plants of 25 or 75 MW like the ones the company unveiled on Wednesday are more economical, he said.

 

California has a goal of installing one million solar roofs and many environmentalists hope Florida and its utilities will commit to a similar program to begin generating electricity closer to where it is used.

 

"We're looking at ways to crack that code, but right now we think it makes a lot more sense to do it in a single spot," he said.

 

FPL said last year it would generate between 8,000 and 10,000 MW of wind power by 2012 and although the company has no similar long-term target for solar, Hay said he expected it to become a very big business.

 

"We believe solar can be, I'm not going to say as big, bigger or slightly less big, but we believe it can be a similar order of magnitude in terms of size," he said. "It's not just a hobby for us."

 

He said the company would "absolutely" meet targets set out last year by Gov. Charlie Crist, which called for the state's utilities to produce 20 percent of their power by solar, wind and other renewable resources by 2020. (Editing by Jane Sutton; Editing by Marguerita Choy)

 

 

 

 

Story by Jim Loney

 

 

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

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