Solar One and Solar Two Solar power towers use thousands of individual sun-tracking mirrors (called
heliostats) to reflect solar energy onto a central receiver located on top of a tall tower. The receiver collects the sun's heat in a heat-transfer fluid that flows through the receiver. The
U.S. Department of Energy, with a consortium of utilities and industry, built the first two large-scale, demonstration solar power towers in the desert near
Barstow, California. Solar Two was decommissioned in 1999, and was converted by the University of California, Davis, into
CACTUS, an Air
Cherenkov Telescope, in 2001, measuring
gamma rays hitting the
atmosphere.
Solar Energy Generating Systems solar complex in northern
San Bernardino County, California. Trough systems predominate among today's commercial solar power plants. Nine separate trough power plants, called
Solar Energy Generating Systems (SEGS), were built in the 1980s in the Mojave Desert near Barstow by the Israeli company
BrightSource Energy (formerly Luz Industries). These plants have a combined capacity of . NextEra says that the solar plants power 232,500 homes (during the day, at peak power) and displace 3,800 tons of pollution per year that would have been produced if the electricity had been provided by fossil fuels, such as oil. Trough systems convert the heat from the sun into electricity. Because of their parabolic shape, trough collectors can focus the sun at 30-60 times its normal intensity on a receiver pipe located along the focal line of the trough. Synthetic oil circulates through the pipe and captures this heat, reaching temperatures of 390 °C (735 °F). The hot oil is pumped to a generating station and routed through a heat exchanger to produce steam. Finally, electricity is produced in a conventional steam turbine.
Desert Sunlight Solar Farm The
Desert Sunlight Solar Farm is a 550
megawatt (MW
AC)
photovoltaic power station approximately six miles north of
Desert Center, California, in the
Mojave Desert. It uses approximately 8.8 million
cadmium telluride modules made by the US
thin-film manufacturer
First Solar. As of Fall 2015, the Solar Farm has the same 550 MW installed capacity as the
Topaz Solar Farm in the Carrizo Plain region of Central California, making both of them tied for the second
largest completed solar plants by installed capacity.
Nevada Solar One Nevada Solar One has a 64-MW generating capacity and is located in
Boulder City, Nevada. It was built by the
U.S. Department of Energy,
National Renewable Energy Laboratory, and
Acciona Solar. The cost of Nevada Solar One is in the range of $220–250 million. The power produced is slightly more expensive than wind power, but was less than photovoltaic (PV) power. As photovoltaics became less expensive, some proposed CSP projects have been converted to photovoltaics projects.
Copper Mountain Solar Facility The
Copper Mountain Solar Facility is a 552
megawatt (MW) solar
photovoltaic power plant in
Boulder City, Nevada.
Sempra Generation began construction of the plant in January 2010 and the facility began generating electricity on December 1, 2010. At its construction peak more than 350 workers were installing the 775,000
First Solar panels on the 380-acre site. The 14 MW system generates more than 30 million kilowatt-hours of electricity each year (about 82 thousand kilowatt-hours per day) and supply approximately 25 percent of the total power used at the base. The Nellis Solar Power Plant was one of the largest solar
photovoltaic systems in North America.
Ivanpah Solar Power Facility The 392 MW
Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, located southwest of Las Vegas, is the world's largest solar-thermal power plant project, which became fully operational on February 13, 2014.
BrightSource Energy received a $1.6 billion loan guarantee from the
United States Department of Energy to build the project, which deploys 347,000
heliostat mirrors focusing
solar energy on boilers located on centralized
solar power towers. In February 2012, Ivanpah was awarded the CSP (
Concentrating Solar Power) Project of the Year by Solar Power Generation USA.
Mojave Solar Project The
Mojave Solar Project is a
solar thermal power facility in the
Mojave Desert in
California, about northwest of
Barstow. Surrounding the hamlet of Lockhart, Mojave Solar is adjacent to
Harper Lake and the
SEGS VIII–IX solar plant. The 250 MW concentrating solar power (CSP) plant was estimated to cost $1.6 billion in total and was commissioned in December 2014. The developer,
Abengoa, secured a $1.2 billion loan guarantee from the US Department of Energy for the project. The nominal 250 MW solar electric generating facility generates steam in solar steam generators, which will expand through a steam turbine generator to produce electrical power from twin, independently operable solar fields, each feeding a 125 MW power island. The plant should generate 617,000 MWh of power annually, enough power for more than 88,000 households and will prevent the emission of over 430 kilotons of a year. Pacific Gas & Electric has agreed to a 25-year
power purchase agreement.
Antelope Valley Solar Ranch The 230 MW
Antelope Valley Solar Ranch is a
First Solar photovoltaic project now owned by
Exelon in the Antelope Valley area of the Western Mojave Desert. In September 2011, the project received a $646 million loan guarantee from the US Department of Energy, and its construction was estimated to generate 350 construction jobs and 20 permanent jobs. ==Environmental impacts==