US DOD releases study positing generation of 7,000MW of solar energy on 4 military bases in CA

  •   A solar installation at the US Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms. Image: U.S. Marine Corps photo by Pfc. Sarah Anderson
    A solar installation at the US Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms. Image: U.S. Marine Corps photo by Pfc. Sarah Anderson

A new study released by the US Department of Defense’s (DOD) Office of Installations and Environment has found that the DOD has the potential to generate 7,000MW of solar energy across four military bases in California’s Mojave Desert. The study, conducted by consultancy ICF International, took place over one year and looked at seven military bases in California and two in Nevada.

The report found that while 96% of the surface area of the nine bases was incompatible for solar installations, due mainly to military use, endangered species and other factors, the remaining area was still large enough to generate over 30 times the electricity consumed by the California bases, or nearly 25% of the renewable energy that California is requiring utilities to use by 2015.

The ICF study advised that much of the surface area of the DOD installations at the nine examined bases consist of undeveloped ranges used for training and other military activities, which would render the area unsuitable for solar arrays. Additionally, the agency found that large parts of the bases’ developed areas had cultural and biological resources, flash flood hazards and other conflicts that would also make those areas unqualified for a solar facility. However, the study did find that 25,000 acres  were “suitable” for solar development, while another 100,000 acres were “likely” or “questionably” suitable for solar.

Edwards Air Force Base, Fort Irwin, China Lake and Twentynine Palms rounded out the top four military bases with the biggest amount of economically feasible acreage for a solar project. IFC’s study additionally concluded that private developers can utilize the solar potential on these installations with no capital investment needed from the DOD. Furthermore, IFC claims that the development could bring the federal government up to US$100 million a year in revenue or other benefits such as discounted power.

Post a Comment

Post

Newsletter

Preview Latest Subscribe
We won't share your details - promise!

Publications

  • Photovoltaics International 14th Edition

    Photovoltaics International 14th Edition

    Published in November 2011, the 14th edition of Photovoltaics International provides a variety of technical papers from some of the industry’s stalwarts. Features include: TÜV Rheinland on junction box testing; Laser Zentrum Hannover on laser edge isolation of mc-Si cells; Calisolar on the importance of traceability; Fraunhofer ISE on EWT cells; and EPIA on Europe’s LCOE.

  • Photovoltaics International Lite, Volume 05 - 2011

    Photovoltaics International Lite, Volume 05 - 2011

    This digital interactive Lite sees Tom Cheyney follow Agua Caliente’s progress on becoming one of first truly utility-scale PV power farms, where 40–50MW (AC) will be commissioned by the end of the year. We also feature one of the world’s largest silicon thin-film PV power plants, Avenal; a report on warnings of the collapse of module prices from Solarbuzz and PI-Berlin presents tips on PV module testing. A print version of this edition will be distributed at Solar Power International 2011 in Dallas, Texas.

  • Manufacturing The Solar Future: The 2011 Production Annual

    Manufacturing The Solar Future: The 2011 Production Annual

    Manufacturing the Solar Future is the primary source guide for detailed information on the PV production process. This annual provides technical details on how the leading companies and research organizations worldwide are addressing this need by dramatically improving their manufacturing processes.

Partners

Acknowledgements

Solar Media