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Small-scale EPC replaces 17,920 panels at two-year-old solar farm

By Kelly Pickerel | July 25, 2017

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Sometimes freak accidents happen. Like when a hail storm takes down an entire 4.4-MW solar farm in Texas.

“This was a very rare, unusual event,” said Adam Burke, president of Texas Green Energy. “It was a pretty isolated area, but it happened to be right over Alamo 2 solar farm. It was baseball-sized hail.”

About one-third of the solar panels at OCI Solar Power’s Alamo 2 dual-axis solar project were visibly damaged by the April 2016 hail storm, with many panels having multiple points of impact. Alamo 2 is one of many sites within OCI’s 400-MW Alamo project for San Antonio’s utility CPS Energy. The damaged two-year-old solar array was still producing some energy, but CPS Energy wanted its asset back at full capacity.

Hail damage. Photo credit: KENS5

Texas Green Energy (No. 184 on the 2017 Top Solar Contractors list), usually a small-scale solar installer based in College Station, Texas, won the bid to reinstall all 4.4 MW at Alamo 2. Although every panel didn’t have shattered glass, many were assumed to have microcracks, so it was determined to replace all 17,920 panels.

“It required some careful planning and orchestration to replace everything all at once with minimal downtime,” Burke said. “We had it all planned out to the day what was going to happen. The plant was divided into four sections called blocks. We shut down two blocks at a time so we could be working on the second one as the first one was coming up so we weren’t just sitting there waiting for things to be reconnected.”

During reconstruction (which began in November 2016), Texas Green Energy did a thorough inspection and found additional problems with the system, most likely unrelated to the hail. Tracking mechanisms weren’t working at 100% and connectors were loose. Luckily, the crews were already working through the zones, so these things could be fixed alongside the panels.

Hail damage. Photo credit: KENS5

“We didn’t just replace modules,” Burke said. “In the interest of long-term reliability of the plant, we inspected the entire system.” Soon, Alamo 2 was back at its full 4.4-MW capacity.

Burke said Texas Green Energy was invested in quelling any anti-solar rhetoric and wanted to get the solar project back up quickly.

“I just imagined that people watching the news story of the hail damage that hit Alamo 2 saying, ‘See I told you! Weather comes along and destroys the whole thing. Where’s your power going to come from?’” he said. “I wanted to prove a point that these things happen and there are mechanisms in place to repair this just like anything else. It’s minor downtime and the whole plant is renewed and restored.”

Now that the previously small-scale solar installer got a taste for big projects, Burke said Texas Green Energy is looking to the future.

“On larger projects, there is a lot more reporting and oversight in just managing labor. Before, you may have four or five people on a smaller commercial job, and that’s pretty easy to manage. Any given day, we had 75 or 80 people on this job,” he said. “We’ve been told by so many folks at OCI that we did such a great job and we were easy to work with, so they’ve been inviting us to submit proposals on several other RFPs, and hopefully one of those will take.”

About The Author

Kelly Pickerel

Kelly Pickerel has over a decade of experience reporting on the U.S. solar industry and is currently editor in chief of Solar Power World.

Comments

  1. Steven J Bernard says

    July 9, 2019 at 11:09 am

    I suspect Nolan Ryan had something to do with this.

    Reply
  2. Sergey says

    December 23, 2018 at 1:26 pm

    software before the rain and hail you need to put the panels vertically or more in the minus angle, then the losses will be minimal

    Reply
  3. Tim Siegfried says

    December 22, 2018 at 2:42 pm

    I worked in thermal solar for Abengoa. They have an emergency mode with backup power to stow in a safe position in case of high wind or other hazards. The hydraulic system was developed by Hine Renewables, a Spanish company.

    Reply
  4. J Wayne Watson says

    October 16, 2017 at 9:18 am

    From a layman’s view, seems like a device to detect heavy strikes on a panel could signal the motors to automatically turn all panels vertical in sufficient time to protect most of the panels.

    Reply
  5. Ziad says

    September 23, 2017 at 11:11 am

    Those are single not dual axis

    Reply
  6. Ziad says

    September 23, 2017 at 11:07 am

    What a waste.. Should’ve oriented them vertically during the storm to prevent hail damage.

    Reply
  7. Scott says

    August 23, 2017 at 8:45 pm

    Maybe a few more with Global warming?

    Reply
  8. Bruce Arkwright says

    August 9, 2017 at 1:16 pm

    PLEASE TELL ME THEY RECYCLED THE PANELS!!!

    Reply
    • Robert Bissett says

      July 9, 2023 at 7:47 pm

      78 million tons of solar panels will be junk by 2050

      Polysilicon … can’t ever be recycled back into polysilicon. If converted into sand it would be absolutely toxic

      aluminum, copper, silver and glass recovery is not economical

      the best way to deal with destroyed or exhausted solar panels is to throw them away, like is done with most wind turbine blades.

      Reply
  9. insignificant person says

    July 27, 2017 at 12:00 pm

    At least it didn’t go boom! Imagine such a hailsorm on an oil refinery.

    Reply
    • jane says

      December 22, 2018 at 6:00 pm

      What an incredibly ignorant statement.

      Reply
  10. John Wax says

    July 26, 2017 at 10:52 am

    “Dual Axis”? Orient them vertical!
    Nobody monitoring, or not enough time maybe?

    Reply
    • Colin says

      August 1, 2017 at 7:00 pm

      You wrote “Dual Axis”? Orient them vertical!” What the heck are you taking about? Your comment makes no sense.

      Reply
      • Cliff Everett says

        August 13, 2017 at 10:51 am

        I was thinking the same thing

        Reply
      • James says

        August 22, 2017 at 1:36 pm

        He means that the panels track the sun, so they could’ve been reoriented sideways like a billboard during the storm event instead of flat horizontally, decreasing the velocity of impact on the panels and reducing the potential damage from the hail.

        Reply
  11. Dan Hamilton says

    July 26, 2017 at 9:02 am

    Hail Storms are RARE in Texas?

    Reply
    • Jay says

      October 24, 2017 at 2:17 pm

      I think they meant “baseball sized” hail was rare. Panels will take up to 1″ by spec.

      Reply
      • Kelly Pickerel says

        October 24, 2017 at 3:00 pm

        Yes, and it’s rare for a hail storm to take down an entire solar farm.

        Reply

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