| Municipal Solar Power Plants // EDF Partners with 
    Nanosolar Posted by: "Nanosolar" nsnews@nanosolar.com
 Wed Apr 16, 2008 8:14 pm (PDT)
 Municipal Solar Power Plants
 By Martin Roscheisen, CEO
 
 At Nanosolar, we believe very much that meaningful scale for solar will come 
    foremost from utility-scale solar power plants, in particular from municipal 
    solar power plants of 2-10MW in size. These are rows of solar panels mounted 
    onto the ground of free fields at the outskirts of towns and cities, feeding 
    power directly into the municipal electricity grid.
 
 A 2MW municipal solar power plant requires about 10 acres of land to serve a 
    city of 1,000 homes — that’s acreage generally easily available at the 
    outskirts of any city of such size in even the most developed countries. 
    Similar for a 10MW plant for a city with 5,000 homes: This would require 
    five such lots.
 
 Municipal solar power plants are an avenue for delivering a GigaWatt of 
    power in a state through one solar farm each in a few hundred cities — local 
    to where the power is needed — as opposed to constructing a new coal-fired 
    or nuclear plant. They can also be deployed very rapidly. (It takes 10-15 
    years to get a new coal plant done; a solar plant can be done in 12 months — 
    provided no administrative blocks exist).
 
 In a solar power plant, solar panels are mounted onto rails above the ground 
    so that grass and flowers can continue to flourish in between and below the 
    rows of panels. Care is taken that sufficient amounts of rainwater can drop 
    through between adjoining panels so that the flowers and organisms below are 
    not starved.
 
 Municipal solar power plants integrate very naturally into the existing 
    landscape as well as the existing electricity grid. By feeding power into 
    the grid directly at municipal voltage levels (typically 20kV), they even 
    avoid the expense of a substation for down-transforming power from high 
    (multi-100kV) transmission voltages as required by conventional power. 
    Furthermore, the solar power plants utilize power inverter electronics with 
    increasingly intelligent features which enlightened utilities around the 
    world are now recognizing as a very good way to improve grid power quality 
    especially at the outer branches of the electric grid where power quality is 
    hard to manage otherwise.
 
 In any region with a decent amount of sunshine, there is no more economic 
    way of reliably providing municipal power during the day than through a 
    municipal solar power plant.
 
 Ground-mounted solar power plants are installed in industrially streamlined 
    ways, with specialized tractors deploying standardized substructure 
    components according to standard system block designs to achieve optimal 
    cost efficiency.
 
 While rooftops are surely a good application too for solar panels, it is a 
    business that’s difficult to scale rapidly in a truly meaningful way. 
    Crawling onto rooftops and mounting solar panels in compliance with building 
    codes is fundamentally always a somewhat more expensive proposition. The 
    truth is that a lot of the money for residential solar only feeds 
    bureaucracy.
 
 Municipal solar power plants can be deployed at a different level of 
    efficiency and speed. This is just not yet known very well to the public, 
    particularly in the United States and in California (where we have 
    California Solar Incentives which are adminstered by the state utilities and 
    which presently block this most cost-efficient form of installing solar).
 
 But towns and cities throughout Europe and Asia have already proven the 
    concept, and more and more — increasingly entire counties in fact — are now 
    implementing plans to go 100% renewable based on a mix of solar and biofuels. 
    It works, it is economic, and it is possible now. (Any U.S. utility 
    executive who is concerned about the new world of local power but desires to 
    learn more should join this trip.) It is a silent revolution going on that 
    the press rarely reports about.
 
 A good exception is an article today in our local newspaper – “Local 
    communities reach for power over energy” (SF Chronicle) – describing how 
    Marin County in California is wrestling with going for local renewable 
    power. We salute their effort. It is well timed, smart, and with a lot of 
    foresight. They are on the right track based on what we see happening in our 
    own industry and in energy overall. In a few years, they will have less 
    expensive power than it is available in the rest of PG&E territory.
 
 The amount of activity going on behind the scenes in readying technologies, 
    sites, and financings for such is tremendous, and this will become very 
    visible to the public in many locations in the United States in 2010. There 
    is a reason why one of the world’s largest power producers invested in 
    Nanosolar.
 
 But now is the time for cities and counties to lay the adminstrative 
    foundation for having their own power, 100% renewable, if they care to make 
    a difference by then.
 
 
 EDF Energies Nouvelles Enters Strategic Partnership with California-Based 
    Nanosolar
 
 EDF Energies Nouvelles (Paris:EEN) announces the signing of a photovoltaic 
    panel supply master agreement with Nanosolar and a $50 million investment in 
    the company.
 
 Silicon Valley based Nanosolar uses innovative technology to manufacture 
    thin-film photovoltaic cells of Copper-Indium-Gallium-Selenide (CIGS) using 
    a printing deposition process. Under the master supply agreement, EDF 
    Energies Nouvelles will gain access from 2009 onwards to part of Nanosolar’s 
    production of solar panels.
 In a solar market in which cutting production cost represents a major 
    challenge, EDF Energies Nouvelles is thus securing its supply of panels at 
    competitive prices. These panels will in particular also help EDF Energies 
    Nouvelles to expand its solar activities in North America.
 In parallel to the signing of the panel supply agreement, the Group, through 
    its EDF Energies Nouvelles Réparties subsidiary, is also participating via a 
    $50 million investment (€31 million) in an equity financing completed by 
    Nanosolar to further accelerate the company’s production ramp.
 
 About EDF Energies Nouvelles EDF Energies Nouvelles is a world-class player 
    in the green electricity generation market, with gross installed capacity of 
    1,443 MW worldwide at 31 December 2007 plus 1,100 MW in gross capacity under 
    construction. With a presence in nine European countries and in the United 
    States, EDF Energies Nouvelles operates in four renewable energy segments 
    (wind, solar, biomass and hydro). Wind energy currently accounts for more 
    than 80% of its installed capacity. With its unique profile as an integrated 
    operator, EDF Energies Nouvelles has a presence spanning the entire value 
    chain, from development and construction through to production and 
    operations & maintenance. The Group also pursues the development and sale of 
    structured assets, which consists primarily in selling renewable energy 
    generating assets to individuals or to energy services companies.
 
 About Nanosolar Nanosolar is a global leader in solar power innovation. 
    Nanosolar's solar electricity panels deliver unparalleled cost efficiency, 
    enabling customers to use green power without paying more. More information 
    on Nanosolar is available on the Internet at
    http://www.nanosolar.com/
 Thanks to  
      
        Christopher May 
        for this update.
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