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301 Moved Permanently

301 Moved Permanently


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KIUC’s Newest Solar Asset Pushes The Capacity Envelope Into New Territory

The 12 MW (AC) Anahola solar power facility REC Solar recently completed for the Kauai Island Utility Cooperative (KIUC) is currently Hawaii’s largest operating photovoltaic plant and has pushed Kauai’s solar capacity to 45 MW - and the island has a load of up to 65 MW.

The Koloa solar project, developed by SolarCity, is also producing about 12 MW. The Port Allen plant Alexander & Baldwin developed is producing 6 MW. There are another 15 MW of distributed generation projects around the island.

“That’s pretty darn aggressive,” says Drew Bradley, Hawaii regional manager for REC Solar. “It’s admirable that KIUC has gone there because no other utility in the U.S. has done that. Hopefully, other co-ops and other utilities are paying attention about what can be done with solar generation.”

KIUC put out a request for proposals (RFP) for the Anahola project in late 2011, and 18 contractors responded. REC Solar had done a couple of smaller, distributed generation photovoltaic projects on the island with the utility before and ended up receiving the award.

Bradley says the constraints of the project posed significant engineering challenges. REC Solar, which has come to specialize in commercial and industrial PV projects, had never developed so large a facility. Significantly, the company had the responsibility of designing the new substation for the plant.

The storage requirements for the project were covered under a separate RFP, which was subsequently won by Saft. The REC Solar team proceeded with the requirement to make provisions for four 1,247 kV low-voltage bays for the 6 MW/4.63 MWh battery-based storage components to land in.

“We used a specialty substation consultant to make sure we got that right,” Bradley says. “But, the balance-of-plant part of the project was right up our alley. We’re pretty deep on the engineering side of things.”

REC Solar designed the system with redundant AC loop feeds. Each of the loops lands on the substation so that there is redundancy in both directions. The equipment on each one of the pads can be isolated, which enables crews to perform maintenance on the blocks individually without shutting down the whole facility.

The array itself consists of 57,624 modules on a ground-mount system with a 20° fixed tilt. The 60-acre site is at an elevation of approximately 800 feet - out of the tsunami zone - on the northeast side of the island. The land is owned by the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands. This imposed an extensive environmental assessment, which required over a year to complete. Although the site did not have any particular wildlife restrictions, soil runoff was a serious concern.

According to Bradley, there was a fair amount of grade to the site, so the builders had to install a series of three retention basins to capture all of the red dirt that would otherwise run off into the ocean. “Hawaii, in general, is extremely sensitive to runoff,” he says. “The design involved quite a bit of civil engineering. It was a very tight site, and we wanted to use every last inch of it. It was definitely challenging to fit those retention basins in.”

Though the environmental concerns were chiefly related to topsoil, the engineering efforts were not. The soil concealed a fair number of very large boulders, so the refusal rate when driving piles could be as high as 10%. This meant REC Solar had to maintain parallel crews that would enable them to switch to grade-beam supports.

“If you can’t drive piles, you’ve got to go to a grade-beam design,” Bradley says. “You have to be able to do this as you roll through the site so you don’t block yourself out of the site where you need to go in and do the grade beams.”

In addition to other physical site requirements, the project called for highway access and a five-acre service yard for KIUC to use for its vehicles and equipment.

Perhaps more importantly, the utility had a requirement to integrate the Anahola power plant with its two existing diesel-fueled power plants. KIUC uses Emerson Process Management’s DeltaV supervisory control and data acquisition system to run its generating assets from its operations center in Port Allen.

If KIUC has taken an aggressive posture with regard to solar, Bradley says to watch out for the utility to do more. “KIUC is saving $250,000 a month on fuel just because of the facility we just completed,” he says.

 

ReVision Energy Completes $1.1 Million Solar Project At Proctor Academy

ReVision Energy has installed a multi-site, 334 kW solar energy project for Proctor Academy, a boarding and day school in Andover, N.H.

The series of six solar arrays is valued at $1.1 million. ReVision owns the rooftop array at the Wilkins Meeting House - the first installation that was completed in 2012. IGS Energy owns the other five installations, which were completed in 2015. The project owners are selling the electricity to Proctor Academy through a power purchase agreement.

Five of the arrays are rooftop mounts, while the most recent installation is a 107 kW ground mount at the Proctor Ski Area. The 352-module array will power snow-making operations, as well as the general campus. The six arrays will generate approximately 389,508 kWh of solar power each year and will offset approximately 25% of the school’s electric load.

One of the school’s goals is to achieve a carbon-neutral campus. In addition to its solar initiatives, the school installed geothermal heating and cooling and a woodchip-fed biomass heating plant, which provides the majority of heat and hot water needed on campus. High-­efficiency snow guns and light fixtures are in place, as are non-toxic cleaning products and recycling efforts.

“Our relationship with ReVision Energy has allowed us to make our environmental efforts fit within the economic realities of running a school like ours,” says Scott Allenby, director of communications and marketing at Proctor. “The installations have also provided the opportunity to engage students with hands-on learning opportunities around our environmental mission and allow us to tie our educational mission with our environmental mission in a very real way for our students.”

 

ecoSolargy Completes 112 kW Commercial PV System In Yorba Linda, Calif.

Irvine, Calif.-based ecoSolargy has completed a 112 kW photovoltaic power system at the headquarters of Command Access Technologies, a manufacturer of locks and security products in Yorba Linda, Calif.

The project features 368 ecoSolargy Titan solar panels and SolarEdge inverters. The installation is expected to produce approximately 165.7 MWh of electricity per year.

Martin Brix, director of commercial PV at ecoSolargy, says that the project was designed to address Command Access Technologies’ specific energy needs.


“It’s not always about offsetting the entire electricity usage of a client, but about finding the proper balance between use and expense,” Brix says, adding that the process begins with an extensive energy study that outlines how and when electricity is being consumed. “Our goal is to create a solution that optimizes energy-production benefits and minimizes cost.”

Projects & Contracts

KIUC’s Newest Solar Asset Pushes The Capacity Envelope Into New Territory

 

 

 

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