Docket Number: | 08-AFC-2 (Application For Certification) |
Committee Overseeing This Case: | |
Karen Douglas, Chairman Presiding Member |
Jeffrey d. Byron, Commissioner Associate Member |
Hearing Officer: Ken Celli |
Beacon Solar, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company is proposing to construct, own and operate the Beacon Solar Energy Project. The project is a concentrated solar electric generating facility proposed on an approximately 2,012-acre site in Kern County, California. The project will use well-established parabolic trough solar thermal technology to produce electrical power using a steam turbine generator (STG) fed from a solar steam generator (SSG). The SSG receives heated heat transfer fluid (HTF) from solar thermal equipment comprised of arrays of parabolic mirrors that collect energy from the sun.
The project will have a nominal electrical output of 250 megawatts (MW) and commercial operation is planned to commence by the third quarter of 2011, subject to timing of regulatory approvals and applicant achievement of project equipment procurement and construction milestones. The solar thermal technology will provide 100 percent of the power generated by the plant; no supplementary energy source (e.g., natural gas to generate electricity at night) is proposed to be used for electric energy production. The project will utilize two auxiliary boilers fueled by natural gas to reduce startup time and for HTF freeze protection. The auxiliary boilers will supply steam to the HTF freeze protection heat exchangers during nighttime hours to keep the HTF in a liquid state when ambient temperatures are not sufficient to keep the temperature of the HTF above its relatively high freezing point (54 degrees Fahrenheit). In order to fuel the boilers, a new 17.6-mile, eight-inch gas pipeline will be constructed to connect The project to an existing Southern California Gas Company (SCG) pipeline in the California City area. The project will also have a dieselfueled firewater pump for fire protection.
The Energy Commission's facility certification process carefully examines public health and safety, environmental impacts and engineering aspects of proposed power plants and all related facilities such as electric transmission lines, natural gas pipelines, etc. The Energy Commission is the lead agency under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and has a certified regulatory program under CEQA. Under its certified program, the Energy Commission is exempt from having to prepare an environmental impact report. Its certified program, however, does require environmental analysis of The project, including an analysis of alternatives and mitigation measures to minimize any significant adverse effect The project may have on the environment.
Eric K. Solorio
Project Manager
Siting, Transmission and Environmental Protection Division
California Energy Commission
1516 Ninth Street, MS-15
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: 651-0966
E-mail: [email protected]
Public Adviser
California Energy Commission
1516 Ninth Street, MS-12 Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: 916-654-4489
Toll-Free in California: 1-800-822-6228
E-mail: [email protected]
Media & Public Communications Office
Phone: 916-654-4989
E-mail: [email protected]
Last Modified: 22 Oct 09