| March 20, 2008 Low-cost Solar Thermal Plants at Heart of Algerian-German 
    Research Push
 by Jane Burgermeister, European Correspondent
 Vienna, Austria [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]
 
     
 The development of a new generation of large-scale, low-cost solar thermal 
    power plants is the focus of a joint research agreement signed between 
    Algeria and Germany.
 
 "Energy in the future will come from many different sources, including 
    biomass and geothermal, but solar thermal power plants can definitely play a 
    big part when they become cost competitive."
 
 -- Bernhard Milow, German Aerospace Center
 
 Researchers will be sharing data and expertise to speed up the market 
    introduction of large-scale solar thermal plants. The plants could supply up 
    to 200 megawatts (MW) of electricity and desalinate water for 50,000 people.
 
 Electricity from solar thermal plants could cost as little as €0.04/kilowatt 
    hour (kWh) [US $0.06/kWh] by 2015 to 2020, Bernhard Milow from the German 
    Aerospace Center (DLR) said. And using solar thermal power to desalinate 
    seawater could cost the same.
 
 "The technology and science is all there. It's just a question of 
    transferring that knowledge to those who have the sunshine and optimizing 
    the technology to make it competitive," Milow said.
 
 Electricity from solar thermal plants currently costs €0.20 to 0.30/kWh [US 
    $0.31 to 0.47/kWh], depending on the location of the plant and the amount of 
    sunshine it receives. But with improvements in the performance of plants and 
    better sites, solar thermal electricity could soon be cheaper than coal, and 
    so generate huge amounts of reliable, clean electricity in hot desert 
    regions, Milow said.
 
 Even factoring in high steel prices and other costs, a kWh of electricity 
    could still be as low as €0.06-0.07/kWh [US $0.09-0.11/kWh] if the power 
    plants are in prime locations, Milow said.
 
 By 2050, he estimated that 10 - 25 percent of Europe's electricity needs 
    could be supplied by North African solar thermal plants.
 
 The agreement between the DLR in Germany and the New Energy Algeria (NEAL) 
    in Algeria will allow German researchers access to data from the 150 MW 
    hybrid solar-gas plant at Hassi R'mel, 420 kilometers south of Algiers. The 
    plant is due to go into operation in 2009 and has a 25 MW solar energy 
    capacity with a parabola trough design. The DLR researchers will look at 
    ways of optimizing the design and manufacture of the component parts and the 
    efficiency of the collectors and absorbers.
 
 Another area for research will be thermal storage technology.
 
 "The DLR has 30 years of experience in solar thermal power technology while 
    Algeria has the right sites for these plants, and has committed itself 
    developing the technology for its own use and for export to Europe, so we 
    can help each other out," Milow said.
 
 Algeria has introduced a feed-in tariff for electricity from solar thermal 
    plants to boost the use of the technology, and NEAL plans to build pure 
    solar thermal plants without gas as soon as the technology allows it. The 
    typical solar thermal plant of the future could be as large 200 MW and 
    supply electricity to 250,000 people and fresh water to 50,000 people.
 
 In fact, solar thermal desalination plants could turn as much as 100,000 m³ 
    / day of sea water into fresh, clean water — and so help boost agriculture 
    and secure the supply of drinking water in a region increasingly hit by 
    drought. According to a German study, there is already a shortfall of 50 
    billion cubic meters of fresh water in the region and that shortfall is set 
    to grow to 150 billion by 2050. Algeria is particularly rich in sites 
    suitable for solar thermal desalination plants.
 
 The DLR has identified the best locations for plants using satellite images 
    to encourage investment.
 
 "80 percent of the finance for solar thermal projects will come from private 
    investors who will be looking for the best return. That means finding places 
    where there are as few clouds as possible," said Milow.
 
 The DLR has used weather data going back for decades to identity locations 
    with the most sunshine. An average of 2200 kWh of solar radiation falls on 
    each square meter of Algeria with 2650 kWh falling on the Sahara desert 
    region; this compares to just 1000 kWh falling on a square meter in Germany. 
    One study estimated that solar energy harnessed just from Algeria could 
    supply 60 times the electricity needs of Europe.
 
 To transport the electricity to Europe, a 1,875 mile high voltage direct 
    current cable is to be built between Algeria and Germany, running through 
    Sardinia, Italy and Switzerland.
 
 "Getting permission from all these countries to build this cable could slow 
    down the project for years because of all the red tape. But the cable will 
    be able to carry electricity to Europe with only about a 10 percent loss," 
    Milow said. He said small quantities of electricity could be imported into 
    Germany as early as 2010.
 
 The DLR is also carrying out parallel research on a pilot 1.5 MW solar tower 
    power plant in Julich in northern Germany.
 
 "We need to do research on several solar thermal technologies to find the 
    best one," Milow said.
 
 He said that the same model could be used in Australia for electricity and 
    water desalination.
 
 "Plants in Australia could even supply enough fresh water to ensure good, 
    reliable harvests in key crop growing areas that have seen yields drop 
    dramatically because of drought. Israel already successfully uses 
    desalinated water for agriculture, so it has been shown to work in practice, 
    " said Milow.
 
 The southern states of America could also expand their solar thermal plants 
    and eventually export electricity to the northern states, Milow said. Solar 
    thermal power plants have been in commercial use in southern California 
    since 1985. Last year, the 64 MW parabola trough Nevada Solar One plant went 
    into operation.
 
 In Spain, 10 new solar thermal plants are being planned. Spain, which 
    introduced a 25-year guaranteed feed-in tariff of €0.26/kWh [US $0.40/kWh] 
    for solar thermal electricity, is building Europe's two biggest parabola 
    trough solar power plants, Andasol I and II, in Andalusia. The 11 MW PS10 
    solar power tower has also started operating close to Seville in southern 
    Spain.
 
 New plants are also being planned in Abu Dhabi, Eygpt, Iran, Israel, Mexico, 
    and Morocco. Milow said Morocco and the Red Sea region could also tap wind 
    power in addition to the sunshine to generate clean energy.
 
 "Energy in the future will come from many different sources, including 
    biomass and geothermal, but solar thermal power plants can definitely play a 
    big part when they become cost competitive," he said.
 
 Looking into the future, networks of decentralized and overlapping renewable 
    energy technologies complemented by irrigation networks and water 
    desalination plants could power economies — and large-scale solar thermal 
    power plants could be playing a key role in the energy supply of many 
    regions.
 
 Jane Burgermeister is a RenewableEnergyWorld.com European Correspondent 
    based in Austria.
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