Categories: CommentarySolar

Abengoa to build 110MW solar tower storage plant in Chile

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Spanish solar energy developer Abengoa has won a contract to build a 110MW solar tower project with storage in Chile, the first project of its type in Latin America.

The project will have 17.5 hours of storage through the use of molten salts. Given that the Atacama desert where the plant is located has the best solar resources in the world, the plant will be able to provide power virtually without interruption if required.

The Cerro Dominador plant follows the construction of a similar sized plant in Nevada by US company Solar Resource. Abengoa has begun construction of a similar but smaller plant in South Africa, the 50MW Khi Solar One facility in South Africa, which will have two hours of storage.

Abengoa is the largest developer of solar thermal energy plants in the world, with a range of large scale projects across the globe, including the recently opened 260MW Solana project in Arizona, which features parabolic troughs and 6 hours of storage.

It is the only company that builds parabolic trough and solar tower installations. Its first solar tower with storage facility was the PS20 installation at the Solucar Complex in Seville, Spain (pictured right). That facility has capacity of 20MW with two hours of storage.

Solar-thermal tower technology uses a series of mirrors (heliostats) that track the sun on two axes, concentrating the solar radiation on a receiver on the upper part of the tower where the heat is transferred to the molten salts.

The salts then transfer their heat in a heat exchanger to a water current to generate superheated and reheated steam, which feeds a turbine capable of generating around 110 MW of power in the case of Cerro Dominador.

The US company Solar Reserve this year will commence operations as the 110MW Crescent Dunes solar tower with storage project in Nevada. That plant has been contracted to deliver electricity between the hours of noon and midnight to the city of Las Vegas.

Solar thermal with storage is coveted because of its ability to provide “baseload” or “dispatchable power” on demand. Unlike most coal plants, it can be switched off – and store energy for future use – as quickly as it can be switched on.

The $1 billion Cerro Dominador plant will have access to more than $500 million in loans from international agencies and as much as $20 million in state subsidies, the Chilean government said.

Despite the high capital costs of the first of their kind plants, developers say that their technology costs (levelled cost of energy) will fall below $100/MWh by the end of the decade, a forecast endorsed by the Australian government’s Bureau of Resource and Energy Economics in its latest energy technology assessment report. This would make them cheaper than many gas-fired peaking plants.

Chile is looking to solar PV and solar thermal to exploit its solar resources and help meet its 20 per cent renewable energy target by 2025. Unlike many developed countries, Chile does not have a problem with over capacity. In fact, the opposite is true and power shortages make the cost of electricity very high.

Abengoa said the storage system would make  the technology highly manageable, enabling it to supply electricity in a stable way, 24 hours a day, responding to all periods of electricity demand.

The project will be located in the commune of María Elena in the Antofagasta region, northern Chile. Construction is due to start in the second half of 2014.

Abengoa has 1,223 MW of installed solar capacity in commercial operation, 430 MW under construction and 320MW in pre-construction, including both solar-thermal and photovoltaic technology.

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and of its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and the EV-focused The Driven. He is the co-host of the weekly Energy Insiders Podcast. Giles has been a journalist for more than 40 years and is a former deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

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