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Mojave Solar Plant: Feds Approve World's Largest Solar Power Plant In Mojave Desert

Mojave Solar

MATTHEW DALY   10/25/10 10:11 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration has approved a thousand-megawatt solar project on federal land in southern California, the largest solar project ever planned on U.S. public lands.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar hailed the $6 billion Blythe Solar Power Project, to be built in the Mojave Desert near Blythe, Calif., as the start of a boom in solar power on federal lands.

"Today is a day that makes me excited about the nation's future," Salazar said Monday at a news conference. "This project shows in a real way how harnessing our own renewable resources can create good jobs here at home."

The Blythe project, being developed by Solar Millennium, a German solar developer, is slated for more than 7,000 acres of public land near the Arizona border, some 225 miles east of Los Angeles.

The project is the sixth solar power development approved by the Interior Department this month – all in California and Nevada. Approval of a seventh project – also in California – is expected in the next few weeks. All could start transmitting electricity by the end of 2011 or early 2012.

At full capacity, the seven projects would generate more than 3,000 megawatts of power and provide electricity for up to 2 million homes. The projects are expected to create more than 2,000 jobs during construction and several hundred permanent jobs.

A spokeswoman for the solar industry said the flurry of announcements shows that efforts made by the Obama administration and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to promote solar power are beginning to pay off.

"We're finally going to see solar energy produced on public lands in the United States – and this is something the public wants," said Monique Hanis, a spokeswoman for the Solar Energy Industries Association, a Washington-based trade group.

The announcements come about five years after solar developers began asking the Bureau of Land Management for rights to develop hundreds of solar plants on millions of acres of federally owned desert in the Southwest.

The bureau opened federally owned lands in 2005 to solar development, but an examination of records and interviews of officials by The Associated Press showed the program operated a first-come, first-served leasing system that quickly overwhelmed its small staff and enabled companies, regardless of solar industry experience, to squat on land without any real plans to develop it.

To expedite environmental review and bureaucratic red tape, the Interior Department identified 14 of the most promising solar projects among the more than 180 current permit applications covering about 23 million acres of federally owned desert in the Southwest.

Those 14 "fast-track" projects alone would produce more than 6,000 megawatts, enough to power 4 million homes for a day at peak usage, officials said.

Hanis, the industry representative, said that even after the 14 fast-track projects are approved, solar energy will remain a tiny fraction of overall energy production on U.S. lands. The projects approved this month are the first ever approved by the land management bureau, compared with more than 74,000 oil and gas permits issued in the past two decades.

Final approval by the end of the year qualifies the solar projects for federal funds under the economic stimulus law approved last year. Solar Millennium is eligible to secure $1.9 billion in conditional loan guarantees from the Energy Department for the Blythe project.

The company will be required to mitigate the project's effect on more than 8,000 acres of habitat for the desert tortoise, western burrowing owl, bighorn sheep and Mojave fringe-toed lizard, as part of an agreement with federal officials.

___

Online:

http://www.doi.gov

http://www.seia.org

(This version CORRECTS name of project to Blythe Solar Power Project.)

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shrinkbcoz
04:19 AM on 10/27/2010
Waste of Money and habitat - Thank you green eyed libnuts read this http://t.co/J1JUuRg
for 4% solar energy we will spend nearly 6 times the cost of traditional energy, cause Chinese to exploit miners of rare earths and pile taxes on the people
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
momofvegasgirls
My bio is not for sale !
04:55 PM on 10/26/2010
Post this on the front page Huffpo. We could all use some positive news!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ryan Magdangal
Pirate Satellite
02:20 PM on 10/26/2010
Great news for California - The Mojave Desert can light up 1/2 of the United States! Cheap clean energy leaves more money in your pocket and clean water and air!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carolr51
12:39 PM on 10/26/2010
This is great news. With enough solar power and other alternative energy, maybe some day they will be able to destroy the dams and let the rivers run wild again. Lovely thought, but I won't be here to see it!
12:16 PM on 10/26/2010
Fanstastic, this is a win win for both the state of california and for the renewable energy movement. This project is expected to bring about 1000 jobs during construction and about 300 or so permenant jobs after its completion. I found those stats on a similiar article on reepedia.com good information over there.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
coveark
Obstructionists, get off the hill !!!
11:24 AM on 10/26/2010
There is a lot of conversation about the Germans getting the contract for building the components for the solar panels.

I visited Germany in 2000. One thing which astounded me about the country was that if you went into any building where we were at............the doors all fit and worked smoothly. Things that were built were well built and functioned. In most newer buildings in the US such as Wal-Mart and other franchise businesses etc. you can go into the bathrooms and the doors are falling off the hinges, and often hang cattywampus so the locks do not match up..........or the seats are sliding sideways and often the water will not work correctly and these are relativly new buildings !! Often in no time at all these buildings are leaking and .........it is just pitiful that the workmanship and shoddy supplies are simply not up to snuff. We need to do better as a people and be competitive because of good workmanship and pride in what we make and do.

I do not know if that is why the contracts went to the Germans or not .......but from personal observation they are good builders.
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supergranny
doing hard time in central florida
12:58 PM on 10/26/2010
get 'er done.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jennifer Hill
Conflicted
10:34 AM on 10/26/2010
This is very cool - but it also demonstrates how woefully unprepared the US industry is to meet our energy challenges. The company developing the project is German.

The Blythe project, being developed by Solar Millennium, a German solar developer, is slated for more than 7,000 acres of public land near the Arizona border, some 225 miles east of Los Angeles.
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IBWatching
Better Living Through Liberalism
06:12 AM on 10/26/2010
Yes!!

First steps.

Thank you President Obama.
layman
Live and Let Live !
02:49 AM on 10/26/2010
Here, come the sun. There, come the sun. Everywhere, come the sun. Let's have a Global Sun Dance Festival.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Schweik
09:25 AM on 10/26/2010
Don't forget a tub of sunscreen, dude.
12:56 AM on 10/26/2010
This is good news but too bad the developer is a German Company. I hope the development contract calls for hiring American engineers, designers, and construction companies, and for using as much as possible American-made materials. Too bad we didn't follow Democrats recommendations and build up our green industries more so we could have developed this great sustainable energy source in out Mojave Desert. But it's not to late to do it now for future projects. Learn from the Germans and get better!
layman
Live and Let Live !
11:09 PM on 10/25/2010
Well, let the sun shines in !
11:02 PM on 10/25/2010
mojvae mo' problems
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mark Germain
10:02 PM on 10/25/2010
Yes to Solar Power!!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bgofca
07:29 PM on 10/25/2010
YES!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:58 PM on 10/25/2010
Sounds great until you get to the part about a German company getting the contract.
The Feds backstopped solar company Solyndra, a Fremont, CA company to the tune of 500M and we have to give the contract to the Germans!!!!!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:27 PM on 10/25/2010
Sure - NOW you howl when the contract didn't go to a US company.

Maybe if you republicans hadn't been dragging your feet on renewables since the '70's we'd be up to speed with the countries who could see more than three feet in front of their faces.

It's gonna take a lot of investment to catch up to where we were when we were the leaders - investment republicans STILL don't want to make.

Do they?
DianneinCA
running forward, laughing...
08:00 PM on 10/25/2010
So true. Of course the flat earth society (republicans) have to find something to be negative about, it is their nature.

Already a fan, faved.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
11:30 PM on 10/25/2010
thanks for callin'm on the BS . . . . .

And NOW is a time to say NO TO 23, the oil company effort to STOP these very types of ENERGY INDEPENDENCE MOVES IN CALIFORNIA!!!
layman
Live and Let Live !
11:00 PM on 10/25/2010
WOW the USA is creating lots of jobs not in the USofA but Germany.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
11:31 PM on 10/25/2010
being BUILT HERE

. . and the Germans and Chinese are AHEAD on SOLAR because the GOP-OIL Party BLOCKED every effort to become energy independent . . . .
01:02 AM on 10/26/2010
The Germans have the system which will be used. Most of the people to install and operate the system will be from and in the U.S. The reason we don't have this technology already developed and cost effective in the U.S. is because of opposition to green jobs, education, and technology which threatened the oil industry by Republicans. So quit complaining and get on board the Green Express.