Published: April 20, 2010
SolFocus Technology to Power Concentrator Photovoltaic Station at Alice Springs Airport in Australia
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - SolFocus today announced that developer Ingenero Pty Ltd will install a
235 kilowatt power station using SolFocus solar arrays to provide solar
power at Alice Springs Airport in the Northern Territory of Australia.
The Alice Springs Airport power station will deliver approximately 600
megawatt hours of electricity directly to the airport's internal
electricity grid, which is roughly 28 percent of the airport's
electricity demand and equivalent to the power used in about 70 homes in
Alice Springs. The airport will be powered by 28 SolFocus 1100S
concentrator photovoltaic (CPV) arrays.
"Alice Springs is the ideal location for CPV technology and Ingenero is
proud to be able to bring SolFocus technology to Australia for the first
time," said Rodger Whitby, General Manager of Generation at Ingenero.
"With SolFocus CPV technology and Ingenero, Alice Springs Airport will
become a solar leader in Australia."
Under the Australian government's $94 million Solar Cities program, the
project will receive $1.132 million from the Australian government;
approximately half of the total project cost. The solar power station
will be located near the Alice Springs Airport terminal, and will
contain 235 kW of CPV arrays that will reduce the airport's carbon
emissions by around 470 ton of carbon dioxide per year. Construction is
expected to be complete by the end of the third quarter, 2010.
"As a major electricity user in Alice Springs, this project is an ideal
way to demonstrate our commitment to harnessing the benefits of
renewable energy," said Ian Kew, CEO of Northern Territory Airports.
"The SolFocus advanced CPV technology provides the potential for
reduction of power costs within the next few years."
"This project between SolFocus and Igenero is the first of its kind in
Australia," said Mark Crowley, president and CEO of SolFocus.
"The Alice Springs Airport solar project is paving the way for SolFocus
CPV technology in Australia and will demonstrate how scalable CPV
technology can deliver unrivalled energy output in hot, sunny regions
with less impact on the surrounding environment than standard solar
panels," added Steve Horne, chief technology officer of SolFocus.
Australia's solar energy consumption represented 0.1 percent of
Australia's total primary energy consumption from 2007-2008, with solar
thermal water heating has been the predominant form of solar energy use
to date.1 "This pioneering solar project at Alice Springs
Airport is just the beginning of a solar transformation in Australia
that will harness the continent's abundant sunlight to deliver low cost,
renewable energy," added Crowley. "SolFocus is optimistic about
Australia's solar market and is confident that CPV technology is
well-matched with Australia's territories and dynamic environment."
SolFocus CPV technology employs a system of patented reflective optics
to concentrate sunlight 650 times onto small, highly efficient solar
cells. The SolFocus SF-1100S system deployed at the airport uses
approximately 1/1,000th of the active, expensive solar cell material
compared to traditional photovoltaic panels. In addition, the cells
utilized in SolFocus CPV systems have over twice the efficiency of
traditional silicon photovoltaic cells. SolFocus also offers
environmental benefits including next-to-no water usage, a small land
footprint with dual use potential, and no permanent shadowing or
wildlife corridor disruption. Additionally, SolFocus CPV provides the
shortest energy payback and lowest greenhouse gas (GHG) intensity of any
solar technology. In solar-rich regions like Australia and the southwest
US, the SolFocus CPV technology yields significantly more energy than
other technologies with an extremely light environmental footprint.
About SolFocus
The SolFocus mission is to enable solar energy generation at a Levelized
Cost of Energy (LCOE) competitive with traditional fossil fuel sources.
To achieve this goal, SolFocus has developed leading concentrator
photovoltaic (CPV) technology which combines high-efficiency solar cells
(approaching 40 percent) and advanced optics to provide solar energy
solutions which are scalable, dependable and capable of delivering on
the promise of clean, low-cost, renewable energy. SolFocus is
headquartered in Mountain View, California with European operations
headquartered in Madrid, Spain, and manufacturing in Mesa, Arizona and
manufacturing partners in India and China. www.solfocus.com
About Ingenero Pty Ltd
Ingenero is a leading Australian renewable energy company specializing
in solar power. Ingenero develops utility scale solar power stations
using a variety of world class solar technologies. Ingenero is the
Australian development partner for SolFocus concentrator photovoltaic
technology. Ingenero also enables commercial and industrial customers
and local government entities to have solar panels on the roofs of their
buildings without the businesses needing to find the upfront capital.
This is achieved using Ingenero's innovative solar power purchase
agreement. Ingenero also supplies and installs PV and solar hot water
systems to residential customers and communities, with an industry
leading system guarantee and tailored finance packages.
1 The
Australian Energy Resource Assessment, Mar. 1, 2010.
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SolFocus, Inc.
Nancy Hartsoch, 408-209-9250 (mobile)
VP
of Marketing
nancy_hartsoch@solfocus.com
or
A&R
Edelman
Joey Marquart, 650-762-2987
joey.marquart@ar-edelman.com
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