The Department of the Interior has approved two solar projects with a third nearing final completion on public lands in Riverside County, California. The three projects will generate roughly 1 GW and are the first projects approved under the Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan (DRECP) in the desert regions of seven California counties.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) approved the Arica and Victory Pass solar projects, paving the way for construction of 465 MW of solar and up to 400 MW of energy storage. Together, these renewable energy projects will result in an estimated combined infrastructure investment of $689 million, $5.9 million in annual operational economic benefit and power approximately 132,000 homes.
In the coming days, the BLM expects to approve the Oberon solar project, a 500-MW photovoltaic solar project on 2,700 acres of public lands.
“As the Interior Department continues to lead the Biden-Harris administration’s all-of-government approach toward its ambitious renewable energy goals, we know that onshore solar projects like those being advanced today will help communities across the country be part of the climate solution while creating good-paying union jobs,” said Secretary Deb Haaland. “We will continue to work in partnership with states, cities, and Tribes to make historic investments in boosting climate resiliency, advancing clean energy projects, and replacing aging infrastructure.”
The BLM this week also announced it is soliciting interest for utility-scale solar energy development on nearly 90,000 acres of public land located across Colorado, Nevada, and New Mexico. The solicitation is the agency’s largest for solar development interest since it designated 17 solar energy zones in a comprehensive 2012 solar energy planning effort.
The Arica, Victory Pass and Oberon solar projects are within areas identified as suitable for renewable energy development as part of the DRECP, which focuses on 10.8 million acres of public lands in the desert regions of seven California counties. This landscape-level plan streamlines renewable energy development while conserving unique and valuable desert ecosystems and providing outdoor recreation opportunities.
The DRECP is a collaborative effort between the BLM, Fish and Wildlife Service, California Energy Commission and California Department of Fish and Wildlife. To approve these sites for renewable energy projects, the Department and the BLM work with Tribal governments, local communities, state regulators, industry, and other federal agencies.
The BLM is currently processing 54 utility-scale onshore clean energy projects proposed on public lands in the western United States. This includes 40 solar projects, four wind projects, four geothermal projects, and six interconnect gen-tie lines that are vital to clean energy projects proposed on non-federal land. The 54 projects have the combined potential to add over 27,500 MW of renewable energy to the western electric grid. The BLM is also undertaking the preliminary review of 64 applications for solar and wind development, as well as 47 applications for wind and solar energy testing.
News item from DOI
Solarman says
The “Department of the Interior” is missing the mark. Since 2003 in the remote regions of the Riverside County Desert, one particular online solar PV farm McCoy solar PV can be built out to about 1GWp, it has only 250MWp capability at this time. Since this site was installed at the 250MWp level one has more efficient solar PV panels. The original panels were made by First Solar and were about 16% efficient at the time. (Now) First Solar manufactures a generation six product line of about 445 watts per panel at 18.2% efficiency. Replacing old First Solar panels with new ones on the 250MWp array and retrofitting this site with single axis east/west tracking would allow 8 sun hours of solar PV harvest in the Winter time and right at 10 sun hours of solar PV harvest in the Summer time would allow 510MWh in the Winter to about, 637.5MWh per day in Summer. Build out this project to the original four phases and one would have, using the latest technology, a site that could generate on average, 2.04GWh per day in Winter and 2.55GWh per day in Summer. No, need to do another EIR, biological study, land right of way study or require more land as it has already been vetted. Add something like a 2GWh redox flow battery to this site and one can have dispatchable energy 24 hours a day for all of Southern California.