May-June 2008

Solar Cost Controller

As energy prices continue to rise, water utilities across southern California are turning to solar energy.

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By Lyn Corum

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The Rancho California Water District in Murrieta, northeast of San Diego County in southern California’s Riverside County, is the newest of the districts to contract for a solar system. It signed a power purchase agreement in January for a 1-MW solar photovoltaic and tracker system to be designed, built, operated, and maintained by SunPower, and financed by GE Financial Services as part of a five-system financing package. (The other four systems are for three businesses and a county.)

Andy Webster, planning and capital project manager at Rancho California, says the project has been in development for about a year. The district completed an economic analysis, solicited proposals, and decided a power purchase agreement was the best option. The system will be located on vacant land adjacent to the district’s wastewater treatment plant, and will provide enough power to satisfy about 25% of the treatment plant’s electrical demand. It is expected to be operational in December, he says.
The district’s existing electrical rate is 12.5 cents per kilowatt-hour, and under the power purchase agreement it will pay 11.1 cents per kilowatt-hour, about an 11% discount. Webster wasn’t sure of the cost of the system, given that the district had a participatory poverty assessment and did not have to worry about a payback period, but he estimated it ran between $9 million and $10 million.

Eventually, SCE will provide a self-generation incentive payment for almost half of the cost and it will go to SunPower. However, it is too early in the development process to determine the exact amount of the incentive.

The Nevada Systems
The Las Vegas Valley Water District has been operating a 3.1-MW distributed solar photovoltaic tracking system since June 2007 at six reservoir and pumping station sites. The district financed the $23.4 million it cost to build the system through its capital facilities fund. It is being paid back through actual annual energy savings of approximately $725,000 and the annual sale of RECs to Nevada Power, which in 2007 totaled $1.3 million. This yields a payback period of 11.6 years for a system with a projected lifetime of 35 years.

The district won the right to sell its RECs, when Nevada Power selected the district’s proposal as part of its 2003 solicitation. Thus, the Las Vegas Valley Water District will make about $1 million a year selling its RECs, as long as its solar arrays continue to operate.

PowerLight won the contract to build the solar system following the district’s solicitation for proposals. The Public Utilities Commission of Nevada approved it in February 2005. The water district’s board of directors had already approved the contract in October 2004. The district claims it is “one of the largest solar undertakings by a public agency in the US.”

The first 821-kW solar array was installed at the Ronzone Reservoir and Pumping State in northwest Las Vegas, and began operating in April 2006. The remaining systems were rolled out every two to four months, until all were operating in June 2007. One system was installed at the Las Vegas Springs Preserve, the historical home of Las Vegas’ founding springs, where a cultural resource center was built. The solar system’s technology and installation will be one of the elements of the cultural center’s educational program.

Bronson Mack, a spokesman for the water district, says most water pumping is done during off-peak hours, and any excess power fed into the grid helps to offset the nighttime pumping. The power generated by the solar systems serves buildings that have to be climate controlled to cool sodium hypochlorite used to disinfect water. He says no utility power is being used at those buildings when solar-generated power is available.

The other advantage the solar system offers is to defer additional power purchases it may need. The district buys 90% to 95% of its electricity from Nevada Power. It holds an option to purchase power from the Colorado River Commission. “[The solar system] certainly does offset anything we purchase and the amount we purchase,” Mack says.

The solar system has generated 7.2 million kWh since April 2006 when the first installations began generating power. The total revenue offset since then is $728,502. The original cost estimate for solar systems at four sites was $22.6 million, but they added two sites and the total cost of the project increased to $23,399,504, Mack says. Also, increasing the cost was the anti-graffiti coating added to metal supports at the Springs Preserve site, given the exposure that site has to the public.

Mack says all sites have residential housing nearby and are visible to the residents. Before the systems were built, letters were sent to neighborhoods and meetings were held with residents, he says. The district has not received any negative feedback then or now, he added. At one site, kids have thrown rocks and broken a few solar panels, but that’s the only problem that has arisen. “We’re trying to talk to the [kids’] grandparents,” Mack says.

A sister agency, the Southern Nevada Water Authority (SNWA), which serves the Las Vegas metropolitan area, is also installing three small systems–two are for a cumulative 238 kW on the roofs of two covered parking structures at the River Mountain Water Treatment Facility and the Alfred Merritt Smith Water Treatment Facility.

Another 200-kW high concentration solar PV system is in the planning stages, also at the River Mountain Water Treatment Facility. This system will be installed near electrical infrastructure, including pumps, making it less expensive to install, according to Mack. He is also a spokesman for SNWA. Mack says the combined solar systems would offset 920,000 kWh annually.

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Concluding Thoughts
There are about 7,500 public water utilities in California, according to the Department of Public Health, which is charged with regulating them. If each could reduce utility-generated electricity at least 5%—if not through a solar system then another renewable technology—it would go a long way toward the CEC’s goal of increasing distributed generation, reducing peak demand, and reducing stress on aging distribution systems. Not only would it allow each water district to save dollars, but it would also go a long way toward reducing the state’s global greenhouse gas footprint, and help California to meet its climate change goals.

The CEC has devoted public interest energy research dollars to water and energy synergies. Saving water saves energy, the CEC argues, in its 2005 IEPR. Moreover, it called for the development of alternative energy generation such as biogas, solar, and wind for water agencies.

Author's Bio: CA-based, Lyn Corum is a technical writer, specializing in energy topics.

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