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March 27, 2009

75-MW CSP Plant to be Built in Florida

Texas, United States [RenewableEnergyWorld.com]

Lauren Engineers & Constructors has signed on with Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) as the engineering, procurement and construction contractor for a new 75-megawatt (MW) concentrated solar power (CSP) plant located near Indiantown, Florida.

Total power produced for this new solar plant will be 155,000 megawatt-hours of power annually.

This project, named the Martin Next Generation Solar Energy Center, will be located on 500 acres of land adjacent to FPL’s Martin Plant. The company broke ground on the plant at the end of last year.

Using parabolic trough technology to capture heat from the sun, this project will include approximately 180,000 parabolic mirrors. Total power produced for this new solar plant will be 155,000 megawatt-hours of power annually.

As a hybrid solar facility that combines a solar-thermal field with a combined-cycle natural gas power plant, the Martin Next Generation Solar Energy Center will use less fossil fuel when heat from the sun is available to help produce the steam needed to generate electricity. 

In addition to this solar project, Lauren also built the Nevada Solar One Power Plant, a 64-MW solar power plant located in Boulder City, Nevada. Construction on that plant was completed in June 2007.

Reader Comments (5)
 
No image available
March 30, 2009
It's not hot enough in Florida for a CSP plant. Needs to be in the desert.
Comment 1 of 5
No image available
March 30, 2009
Solar insolation is more important than ambient temperature, but I was surprised that they find it sunny enough in Florida for CSP. However, with a hybrid system with natural gas as a back up, it'll work... just not quite as efficiently as if it were in a desert.
Comment 2 of 5
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April 1, 2009
The back up of the natural gas for this Hybrid CSP will cover the short fall in insolation in Florida and probably the plant will have little less generation , but lets go ahead with the green power project without any hurdle as these developments are healthy and not many around the world.
Comment 3 of 5
No image available
April 8, 2009
The hybrid system opens up new opportunities for solar. Whereas solar (CSP) has been reserved for areas of the country with the most intense solar radiation in the past (NV, CA, AZ), hybrid technology allows for CSP to become feasible in other solar-rich areas of the country by augmenting current power generation facilities.
Comment 4 of 5
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April 22, 2009
My congratulations to do this big job and with renewable energy. I agree with some other comments in terms about UV in Florida. I would like to contact Jody Lee, because in Chile, specially in our Atacama desert (dryiest one in the world) we can have 12X365x infinite hours of sun shining in about more than 1.400 Kmts long. Now there is a tender that we can quote, and need a Company like this one: Laureen Eng, in order to offer as Turn Key. First is 1 MW and after 10 MW Solar generation to attend mines customers. Total should be around 2.000 MW. Also for desalination power plants. I offer all my support for this and other projects. Thanks
Comment 5 of 5
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