Published:
Duke Energy Seeks Solar Suppliers to Launch $100 Million Solar Plan
CHARLOTTE, N.C., Sept. 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Duke Energy Carolinas
is seeking bids from solar power companies to supply solar panels, electrical
equipment and installation services as part of the utility's proposed $100
millionNorth Carolina solar plan.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20040414/DUKEENERGYLOGO )
Starting in early 2009, Duke Energy wants to install electricity-
generating photovoltaic solar panels at up to 850 North Carolina sites,
including homes, schools, office buildings, shopping malls, warehouses and
large manufacturing facilities -- both on roofs and on the ground.
Electricity generated through the program would total at least 16
megawatts -- enough to power 2,600 homes -- after the solar power is converted
from direct current to alternating current.
The proposal, first announced in June, requires approval by the North
Carolina Utilities Commission before it can be implemented.
Duke Energy would own and, through contractors, install and maintain the
solar panels. The utility also would own the electricity generated, which
would be sent to the electrical grid that serves all customers.
The company would compensate homeowners, businesses and other entities
that offer their roofs or land for the program, based on the size of the
installation and amount of electricity generated at any given location.
The solar plan would be Duke Energy's first large-scale involvement in
distributed generation, in which electricity is generated close to customers
rather than at large, centralized power plants.
Duke Energy will begin installations in early 2009, contingent on
regulatory approval. The company proposes to complete all installations by
late 2010.
Each installation is expected to have a useful life of 20 to 25 years.
Duke Energy would contract with one or more companies that specialize in
solar technology to supply and install the necessary materials and equipment
at all sites.
Companies interested in bidding on the project can visit Duke Energy's
renewable energy web page -- duke-energy.com/environment/renewable-energy.asp
-- then click on "North Carolina Solar Distributed Generation Program."
In addition to its solar distributed generation plan, Duke Energy in the
past four months also has announced a series of other renewable and clean-
energy initiatives, including:
-- The purchase of the entire electricity output (16 megawatts) from what
will be one of the nation's largest photovoltaic solar power plants, to
be built inDavidson County, N.C., during the next two years.
-- A partnership with General Motors and other utilities to help lay the
groundwork for the large-scale launch of plug-in electric vehicles,
starting in 2010.
-- The acquisition of a large wind company --Vermont-based Catamount
Energy -- which has 283 net megawatts of wind power in operation and
another 1,750 megawatts under development.
-- A request for proposals from renewable energy developers to supply
significant amounts of electricity to Duke Energy customers inOhio.
-- The purchase of the entire electricity output from a power plant fueled
by methane gas naturally emitted from decaying garbage at a closed
Durham, N.C., landfill. The facility will produce enough electricity to
serve 1,600 homes.
Duke Energy's Carolinas' operations include nuclear, coal-fired, natural
gas and hydroelectric generation. That diverse fuel mix provides nearly 21,000
megawatts of safe, reliable and competitively priced electricity to more than
2.3 million electric customers in a 24,000-square-mile service area ofNorth
Carolina andSouth Carolina.
Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK), one of the largest electric power companies in
the United States, supplies and delivers electricity to approximately 4
million U.S. customers in its regulated jurisdictions. The company has
approximately 35,000 megawatts of electric generating capacity in the Midwest
and the Carolinas, and natural gas distribution services inOhio andKentucky.
In addition, Duke Energy has more than 4,000 megawatts of electric generation
inLatin America, and is a joint-venture partner in a U.S. real estate
company.
Headquartered inCharlotte, N.C., Duke Energy is a Fortune 500 company
traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DUK. More information
about the company is available on the Internet at: www.duke-energy.com .
Contact: Dave Scanzoni
Phone: 704-382-2543
24-Hour: 704-382-8333
SOURCE Duke Energy
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