The plants will cover 12.5 square miles of central California with solar panels, and in the middle of a sunny day will generate about 800 megawatts of power, roughly equal to the size of a large coal-burning power plant or a small nuclear plant. A megawatt is enough power to run a large Wal-Mart store.
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While I'm not extremely keen on these sort of plants -- there's no real reason to centralize solar generation like this -- it's nice to see that solar's being taken seriously. Given recent advances in photovoltaic technology, the price is coming down enough for it to be put anywhere the sun shines. In other words, there's no reason to use up huge expanses of land when you can do the same thing on rooftops.
Still, any time new generating capacity comes from green tech, it's good news.
Still, any time new generating capacity comes from green tech, it's good news.
1 comments:
This is the problem with the rush to utilize solar. It can be a wonderful private-use technology, but there's a lot of "grid junkies" that insist on centralized implementation, oversight, and control, to protect the technology from any real chance at legitimate individualized energy independence.
The way I'd like to see solar put to use doesn't require centralized federal controls or distribution.
But this is a great sign for the future of alternative energy sources.
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