Earth to BrightSource: the media will never get Ivanpah right

CleanTechnica

BrightSource Energy’s massive Ivanpah concentrating solar power plant began ramping up to speed in the Mohave Desert last February, busily cranking out solar-sourced electricity after years of planning and construction. Given the plant’s hefty Energy Department loan guarantee, Ivanpah has also been cranking out controversy from the get-go, with our friends over at Fox News gleefully leading the charge.

We thought that was all over and done with now that the plant is up and running, but earlier this month a new development in Ivanpah’s financing gave Fox another opportunity to pounce. BrightSource has responded with a missive to set the record straight on Ivanpah, so let’s see what the buzz is all about.

rsz_ivanpah-concentrating-solar-power-plant
Ivanpah CSP (screenshot, courtesy of NRG).

What Is Ivanpah?

At 377 MW, Ivanpah is the largest CSP plant of its kind in the world. Just last August we took note when Power Magazine conferred its prestigious Plant of the Year award on Ivanpah. It’s also worth noting that the developer, energy giant NRG, garnered the “Top Developer” award at the annual Solar Power International conference in October, partly in recognition of the Ivanpah plant.

Ivanpah is also the largest project to get a kickstart from the Energy Department’s Loan Guarantee Program, which just issued a detailed report on its overwhelming success.

Paying off the loan is what generated the latest round of attacks, so BrightSource leads off with that before getting into its top five list of things to set right.

“The Top Five Things Some Media Can’t Seem to Remember About Ivanpah”

Apparently, Fox characterized the payoff process as a “bailout” in the form of a a federal grant. Ivanpah qualifies for a 30% Investment Tax Credit now that it’s operating, and the terms of its loan guarantee require it to use those proceeds to pay down the loan.

But, bailout sounds a lot sexier, so how are the story editors supposed to resist that?

As for the five-point list, you can get the full rundown from BrightSource but here’s a quick recap for those of you on the go:

1. “The Ivanpah Project is Meeting Expectations.” As a massive facility deploying innovative technology, Ivanpah is on a learning curve track and it would be silly to expect it to achieve 100 percent operating capacity at the push of a button (as noted by Associated Press, the ramp-up period is expected to take up to four years).

2. “Ivanpah is complying with requirements of the DOE Loan Guarantee Program.”  We just covered that, didn’t we? BrightSource further notes that the Investment Tax Credit was first enacted during the Bush Administration in 2005, with bipartisan support.

For that matter, BrightSource began the loan application in 2006, also during the Bush Administration. The company also notes that along with NRG, Google backed up its application with a hefty investment.

3. “Ivanpah’s impact on Birds is Minimal, But Also a Priority.” Cat owners, can you spell b-e-l-l? According to a study performed with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, from January to June 2014, 321 bird deaths occurred at Ivanpah. Of those, 133 were related directly to the concentrated sunlight aka solar flux. We have a problem with that, but let’s keep things in perspective. Between cats, buildings, existing power lines, vehicles, you’re talking hundreds of millions of bird deaths.

4. “We Don’t Control the Weather.” No, really? As luck would have it, Ivanpah has been chugging away this year under “substantially worse” weather conditions than projected by the historical average, which translates directly into lower output than anticipated. So let’s give it a couple more years to see how things shake out.

5. “Natural Gas is Used to Maximize Renewable Energy Generation in Accordance with State Law.” Ugh. In all the excitement over Ivanpah being the world’s largest CSP, the plant’s built-in reliance on natural gas somehow got lost in the sauce.

We have a little problem with natural gas (as does our sister site, PlanetSave), but the plant was designed to kickstart daily operations with natural gas, in order to get ready for incoming sunlight as quickly as possible without compromising the equipment. And yes, the maximum amount of natural gas permitted is written into state law.

Perhaps some day in the sparkling green future Ivanpah will wake up every morning to the tune of renewable biogas from a landfill or a dairy farm or whatever, but in the meantime fossil gas it is.

So, that’s that. If any of this is news to you, drop us a note in the comment thread.

Meanwhile, for all you BrightSource fans out there, the company is already tackling the next big thing. Last summer it inked a deal with Alstom and the Noy Infrastructure and Energy Fund to close out the financing for what will be the largest solar power plant in Israel.

 

Source: CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

10 responses to “Earth to BrightSource: the media will never get Ivanpah right”

  1. john Avatar
    john

    Fox News that leading edge media company that has a business plan to keep people worried so that it can say “We are here to protect you” while piling on the worry with video of the latest car crash, fire or what ever other type of rubbish they can find to keep people in a state of anxiety.
    In that state they can then direct them to the advert that is going to make them feel better it is simplistic and it works especially with low educational achievement people sorry but that is a fact.
    Of course they are going to pillow this technology because it does not fit the business plan what else would you expect?
    Ok for instance how much RE does Fox News use just a question.
    Discard this low level deliverer of bottom dweller drivel.

    1. Giles Avatar

      It’s not Fox News though, it’s mainstream media too, and the pro-nuke lobby too. One of their cheerleaders was at a G20 energy forum last week sprouting this nonsense as proof solar doesn’t work.

      1. john Avatar
        john

        Giles it was not that long ago one of the Senators for Queensland gave a speech proclaiming that “PV does not work and you will be wasting your money buying the rubbish ”
        He still holds his seat

      2. Mark Duffett Avatar
        Mark Duffett

        So greentechmedia.com is part of the mainstream media and/or the pro-nuke lobby? That’s a new one. http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/ivanpah-solar-plant-falling-short-of-expected-electricity-production

        There happens to be a video of the G20 energy forum referred to, so readers can judge for themselves exactly what was said: https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=IzbI0UPwQHg

        1. Giles Avatar

          Yes, look at 10m 20 seconds, for ben’s use of erroneous data on Ivanpah, as i pointed out. He says he supports solar and the only project he mentions is a single, new project which he misrepresents. Sadly, he didn’t post the Q&A – which i also recorded – in which he laments “the anti-nuclear brigades” – a comment he pretended he did not make when he thought i did not have a recording.

          1. Mark Duffett Avatar
            Mark Duffett

            Yes, I’m following the ongoing discussion at decarbonisesa.com (there are already several replies to your post). I don’t think it’s accurate to describe the data as ‘erroneous’. The data are what they are, the question is what they signify. I think it’s fair to say none of us have heard (no pun intended) the last of this, in several respects.

          2. Giles Avatar

            You say” I don’t think it’s accurate to describe the data as ‘erroneous’.
            Oh, Mark, give it up. The production figure Ben used was for 2018. He’s pretending it was for the first ramp up year.
            I mean really, if nuclear advocates want to make a case for their technology, fine. But don’t make stuff up.

          3. Mark Duffett Avatar
            Mark Duffett

            Projections/plans/targets are not ‘data’, not to my way of thinking. I stand by what I said.

            But in any case, can you or anyone else give the figure that Ben should have used? Does BrightSource’s apparent reluctance to give such a figure, in the circumstances that arose, not ring any alarm bells with you? Is everyone (not least their investors) supposed to take BrightSource’s word for it that everything is hunky dory until 2018, irrespective of posted production figures? Singling Ben out as ‘pretending’ is pretty ordinary when he’s simply done the same as every other media outlet from Breaking Energy to GreenTech Media to the Huffington Post (very much not just Fox and the ‘pro-nuclear lobby’) and taken as a comparison the only target numbers BrightSource and the US DOE have made available.

            “In email exchanges preceding our original story, BrightSource never mentioned a four-year timetable for the plant to get up to full speed” (http://breakingenergy.com/2014/11/19/ivanpah-solars-first-nine-months-300000-megawatt-hours-at-185mwh/)

    2. Alan Baird Avatar
      Alan Baird

      Too right about catering for the knuckle draggers. “News Limited” was its more accurate moniker… or perhaps a change to “Opinion Unlimited”.

  2. Alan Baird Avatar
    Alan Baird

    FarkSnooze: gimlet eyed zealots, employing minions to scan desperately for anything that is positive for energy incumbents.

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