Lockheed Martin joined Florida GovernorRick Scott, Duke Energy President of Florida Utility Operations Alex Glenn and other local officials to celebrate the powering up of its 151,400 square foot solar array covering the parking lot at its facility near Clearwater, Florida. The project represents Florida’s largest, private solar array.
Lockheed Martin and lead contractor Advanced Green Technologies broke ground on the project in March 2015. Since then, 7,260 solar modules manufactured by Hanwha SolarOne Company and inverters by SunGrow were networked to create the 2.25-MW solar carport. AGT designed and led construction for the project, which was completed and tested by September 2015.
“This plant is indicative of Lockheed Martin’s drive to be energy efficient and a responsible corporate citizen,” said Leo Mackay, Lockheed Martin vice president of Sustainability. “It is a building block in our larger effort to align our company with the demands of this century: global security; advanced infrastructure; and renewable energy.”
The solar project will generate 3.33 million kilowatt hours per year resulting in $6.5 million in savings over 25 years. The covered parking will not only provide shade for more than 500 cars, but it will also slash greenhouse gas emissions by 35 percent.
The Lockheed Martin location near Clearwater, Florida employs approximately 500 employees and 100 contractors providing engineering, software development and other services for company programs. Lockheed Martin is the largest industrial employer in Florida with approximately 12,000 employees in the state. Across locations, the company focuses on optimizing the use of natural resources to reduce carbon emissions through improved energy management. Lockheed Martin is currently considering other Florida sites to construct an additional solar carport.
Earl White says
Kelly,
Nice to see that you are still writing about solar after 7 years. I just retired from Lockheed Martin after a 36 year career, mostly in Flight Test in Marietta. I was looking at lmclw.com and reading your article from October 2015 and noticed that the facility was projected to generate 3.3 Million kwh per year. Real time data suggests that it has not met that goal (call it 19 Million kwh over 7 years). Would that be more thunderstorms than expected, panels not being cleaned regularly? It has been eye opening to me looking at the max output in December versus June. Even though the capacity is 2.26 Mw, that number is almost never achieved. LM uses a 10.8 cents per kwh on the website so in round numbers the energy generated would be worth $1.8 M. Does that recoup the cost of the installation and the cost to maintain? I guess if it lasts 25 years as your article says, LM will begin to reap a benefit now. I know all the employees must love being able to park in the shade. I’m curious as to whether panel technology has improved significantly in the last seven years. I never heard of Lockheed investing in any more solar in Florida. Was the return on this project not what they hoped for? Thanks for any reply.