Solar Energy Companies Competing for Desert Land  

Posted by Big Gav in , , ,

EcoGeek reports that the land rush for prime solar thermal power sites in the US southwest is continuing - Energy Companies Competing for Desert Land.

Not since the Gold Rush has there been such a stampede to stake out land in California and surrounding states, except this time, solar energy is the prize. The Bureau of Land Management has been swamped with applications for solar projects across millions of acres of desert since July.

The bureau has seen a 78% increase in applications, now totaling 223. The applicants are all looking to capitalize on desert land in California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado, with California leading with 107 applications alone. All of the projects are 10 MW or larger, with many proposing hundreds of megawatts. All together the projects would take up 2.3 million acres of land and would generate many, many gigawatts (the 75 projects listed on the BLM website total 51.6 GW and that's only a third of the applicants).

Out of the 223 applications, only 2 projects have progressed to the stage of environmental reviews, the real "make or break" when it comes to issuing permits (one is a 400 MW solar-thermal plant proposed by BrightSource, the other a 750 MW solar-thermal plant proposed by Stirling Energy). This is partly because many projects don't ever get past the application, but largely because the BLM is understaffed for this kind of demand and the bureau can't keep up. The BLM is looking to the new administration to increase their budget so more employees can be hired to process these requests.

This is a great example of where the new administration could back up their "green jobs" agenda. Not only would the BLM be hiring, but imagine the jobs created by these large solar projects that would likely take years to get up and running. If even a few of these projects end up getting approved, this could mean lots of jobs and lots of new solar energy.

2 comments

Anonymous   says 1:24 PM

Problem with all those new jobs is who gets them!

Recently with the Nevada Solar One project a lot of the construction jobs were meant to be locally awarded (the state of Nevada even gave money to the project with this in mind) actually went to Mexicans and central Americans.

Having lived in the States and with Americans in Oz I can well understand this lack of willingness to do actual physical work when you can pay a Mexican a lot less money to do it. Standing out in 100 degree heat laying cables, concrete or levelling ground is not my idea of fun either!

I hope you get my point of unintended consequences. Personally I am a big fan of solar power. Imagine a similar scenario in Oz if the Mildura solar plant was constructed by Chinese because the wages were lower.

Well - its a little trickier for Chinese workers to reach Oz illegally (though plenty do) than it is for Mexicans to walk over the border so I'm not too worried on that score.

Doing manual work out in the bush is hard work in any case - its hard to get locals to do it except on a fly in / fly out basis.

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