Antelope Valley Solar Ranch Overview
In September 2011, the U.S. Department of Energy issued a $646 million loan guarantee to support the project's construction.[ 1] This loan guarantee was part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 .[ 7] The project is expected to create 350 construction jobs and 20 permanent jobs.[ 1]
On February 20, 2013, the first 100 MWAC came online.[ 8] The plant will use approximately 3.8 million solar panels,[ 6] about 20% of which will be mounted on single-axis tracking racks.[ 1] When fully operational, the plant is expected to generate enough energy for 75,000 homes, displacing 140,000 tons of CO2 per year.[ 8] The power generated by AVSR1 is being purchased by Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) under a 25-year Power Purchase Agreement.[ 1] [ 8]
Electricity Production
Generation (MW·h ) of AV Solar Ranch One [ 9]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Total
2014
60,933 56,929 52,593 42,933 30,309
243,697
2015
37,018 44,005 54,695 58,280 62,283 57,808 61,724 61,790 53,927 47,614 43,426 36,838
619,408
2016
32,935 46,208 53,436 55,097 62,375 61,868 64,535 61,770 56,081 46,491 41,614 31,884
614,294
2017
32,470 35,964 54,112 55,959 61,980 61,839 60,944 58,500 55,398 53,005 39,893 37,885
607,949
2018
36,279 44,379 48,604 57,764 63,414 61,891 58,385 59,406 55,420 48,906 38,405 33,382
606,235
2019
29,889 35,096 50,802 56,509 57,218 60,036 60,504 61,467 54,174 45,567 37,007 27,365
575,634
2020
39,053 45,448 41,055 51,660 59,820 57,073 60,313 53,436 45,572 44,493 39,195 33,014
570,132
2021
35,211 41,830 52,505 58,413 62,902 58,568 57,547 57,184 51,842 47,535 41,120 29,030
651,255
2022
41,120 43,984 53,269 58,266 62,542 59,217 60,502 57,296 50,528 49,547 40,547 29,569
606,387
2023
30,340 36,653 45,638 58,446 58,241 56,274 56,437 53,035 50,982 47,963 36,838 36,879
567,726
Average Annual Production (2015-2022) 606,412
References
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Exelon (Antelope Valley Solar Ranch)" . US Department of Energy (DOE). Retrieved 3 July 2014 .
↑ "First Solar shares jump after Antelope Valley construction OKd" . Los Angeles Times . Archived from the original on 2012-06-25. Retrieved 3 July 2014 . Shares of First Solar Inc. soared after the biggest maker of thin-film solar panels received permission to continue construction on a $1.36-billion power project in Los Angeles County.
↑ Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?" . MeasuringWorth . Retrieved November 30, 2023 . United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
↑ GreenTechMedia.com, Herman K. Trabish, First Solar Cleared to Resume Construction in Antelope Valley , 19 May 2013
↑ GreenTechMedia.com, Herman K. Trabish, Antelope Valley Solar Ranch One: The Solar Power Plant That Could , 5 March 2012
1 2 "Antelope Valley Solar Ranch One" . Exelon. Retrieved 3 July 2014 .
↑ "American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) Loans - Award Summary: AV Solar Ranch 1, LLC" . Recovery.gov . The Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2014 .
1 2 3 "AV Solar Ranch One Solar Power Plant Achieves 100 MW Milestone" . First Solar. Archived from the original on 12 July 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2014 .
↑ "AV Solar Ranch One, Monthly" . Electricity Data Browser . Energy Information Administration . Retrieved May 23, 2019 .
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