Western Solar Inc
Showing posts with label bellingham solar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bellingham solar. Show all posts

Friday, October 24, 2014

We're Hiring! Solar Warehouse Position

Become part of an exciting, growing industry! Western Solar has been a major player in the expansion of the solar industry in Washington State, and as the industry grows, so does our need for hard-working, passionate people to join our team. We are currently looking to fill an entry-level position with the potential to advance.

The solar warehouseman will be responsible for keeping the warehouse in a neat and orderly fashion. They will need to develop organization strategies to keep parts and equipment in a manner that will be easy to maintain and allow for flexible inventories. They will work with field personnel to help maintain company vehicles by cleaning, organizing, and stocking them. They will also work with office staff to run errands and perform other needed tasks.

Responsibilities:
  • Clean and organize warehouse
  • Check-in and stock parts and equipment shipments
  • Perform regular vehicle inspections for proper tire pressures, oil level, working lights, etc...
  • Maintain and dispose of recycled materials
  • Maintain installation vehicle by cleaning, organizing, and stocking parts and equipment
  • Pre-assembly of racking components
  • Building of project parts orders
  • Assisting with project installations in the field when needed

Qualifications:
  • Ability to lift, pull and push materials and equipment weighing approximately 50 pounds on a frequent basis.
  • Highly organized
  • Great attention to detail.
  • Professional in appearance, with excellent customer service skills.
  • Valid Driver's License and clean driving record required.
  • Comfortable driving full size trucks and vans

To apply, send resume with cover letter by EMAIL ONLY to gosolar@westernsolarinc.com. Only candidates whose qualifications meet the requirements of the position will be contacted. No phone calls, walk-ins, or third parties, please.
Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 11:12 AM No comments:
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Labels: bellingham jobs, bellingham solar, bellingham solar jobs, bellingham student jobs, solar jobs, solar jobs in Washington, whatcom county jobs

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

We're Hiring! Solar (PV) Installer

Join our great crew!
Are you interested in joining the Western Solar team? We're looking for an installer!

The installer will be responsible for photovoltaic system installation from beginning to end.  In this position, the installer will install all photovoltaic mounting system components, assist with electrical equipment, and ensure successful operation of complete photovoltaic system, while proficiently communicating and updating project status with staff.  This is an outdoor position requiring work on elevated roofs, in harness, in inclement weather, throughout the year.

Responsibilities:
  • Complete projects within established policies and procedures.
  • Complete projects within timeframes and budgets.
  • Maintain high levels of quality assurance and quality control with an emphasis on crew safety.
  • Ensure installation vehicle has all materials, tools, and equipment to perform job safely and efficiently.
  • Assemble the solar array racking, properly seal all roof penetrations and install all relative equipment.
  • Work exceptionally well with others.
  • Diagnose and troubleshoot system malfunctions and operational issues.
  • Communicate with customers in a professional, considerate, and respectful manner, answering all questions and complaints to the best of your ability.
  • Work closely with electrician to ensure efficient installation of electrical components.
  • Ensure that the jobsite is kept in clean and professional manner.
  • Maintain all project documentation, permits, manuals, and warranty information while ensuring documents distributed to the proper departments.
  • Maintain communication with project scheduler and prepare for upcoming projects ensuring all parts and equipment is available and ready for installation.
  • Ensure project upon completion is ready for both electrical and structural inspection.

Qualifications:
  • More than 1 year of previous installation experience desired.
  • Must have electrical and roofing experience.
  • Experience complying with OSHA safety requirements and regulations.
  • Must have full range or mobility in upper and lower body; ability to work in various positions and environments.
  • Ability to lift, pull and push materials and equipment weighing approximately 50 pounds on a frequent basis.
  • Professional in appearance, with excellent customer service skills.
  • Great attention to detail.
  • Valid WA Driver’s License and clean driving record required.
  • Maintain either 01/02 electrical license or an electrical trainee card.
To apply, send resume with cover letter by EMAIL ONLY to gosolar@westernsolarinc.com

Only candidates whose qualifications meet the requirements of the position will be contacted. No phone calls, walk-ins, or third parties, please. 
Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 2:00 PM
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Labels: bellingham job, bellingham solar, hiring, jobs bellingham, PV installer, skagit jobs, snohomish jobs, solar installer, washington jobs

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

"Our House" Goes Solar!

This month, Western Solar and Bellingham-based solar panel manufacturer Itek Energy teamed up to help Interfaith Coalition reach their goal of going solar on their new Our House triplex in Ferndale. Once construction was complete, our team got to work to help make their dream of going solar come true.


On the morning of August 22nd, the Western Solar crew loaded up the truck and headed up to Ferndale to start the job. Installers Zeke, Craig, and Brenden donned their safety harnesses and got to work getting the racking mounted to the roof, while electricians Kelly and Brad ran the wiring and mounted the housing for the new production meter.


Once the racking was installed on the roof, the crew enjoyed an unexpected mid-morning coffee break, when Interfaith campaign chair Rev. Bobbi Virta showed up with coffee and snacks.


After the guys finished refueling on caffeine and sugar, the panels went up and in short order were secured down and ready to generate power!


The new 2.545 kW solar electric system consists of ten Itek Energy solar modules, five of which were donated by Itek Energy, the rest purchased at cost by Saint James Presbyterian Church and Interfaith Coalition. Western Solar covered the cost of labor, permitting, and racking materials. The new system is expected to produce 2,545 kWh/year and provide over $1,100 of bill savings and incentives annually.

About Interfaith Coalition

Thank-you note we received from
Interfaith Coalition. Click to view larger.
Interfaith Coalition's housing is a community effort supported by 44 diverse congregations. The Coalition manages eleven single-family homes for emergency and transitional housing, offering options to all families and enabling them to stay together, where they would otherwise be split up in a shelter. With three months of Interfaith Coalition housing and support, 90% of families find stable housing.

Two years ago, Interfaith Coalition started the process of converting a single-family home in Ferndale into a triplex, which would be able to house up to ten families in need every year. The community came together and over 600 individual donors, businesses, foundations, and congregations contributed to help make Our House a reality. Our House will now house three homeless families at any one time, they move toward self-sufficiency. Learn more about the Our House project.
Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 2:12 PM No comments:
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Labels: bellingham solar, community support, ferndale solar, interfaith coalition, interfaith coalition solar, solar non-profit, western solar, whatcom solar

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Itek Breaks Record!

June was a Record Breaking Month for Itek! 

The busy Itek crew built and shipped over 1 megawatt of locally built solar modules in June!  They celebrated with root beer floats and lunch and got ready to break the record again in July.  They opened the month by starting the night shift and are on track to build over 15 megawatts within the next year!

Congratulations Itek!   




Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 4:02 PM
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Labels: bellingham solar, Itek Energy, Itek Energy Modules

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

The Future of Solar is Bright

With federal, state, and utility incentives, the residential solar industry is seeing growth upwards of 50% per year.

In 2005, Western Washington University professor, Jack Hardy, started a renewal energy company as more of a hobby. Nine years later, his garage start-up is thriving with two locations and over 130 projects completed last year alone.

Now retired, Jack’s legacy is doing business as Western Solar Inc and under new direction. Josh Miller, General Manager, reported substantial growth in 2013. “We installed the second largest number of projects in the state last year. Our business has easily grown 50% annually since 2009.”

Recently, Miller completed a contract for a 108kW/400 panel installation which will mark the largest array in King County and fourth largest array in the state. This project will take what was once a small town operation and make it into one of the leading solar installation businesses in the Puget Sound.

According to the Solar Energy Industries Association’s (SEIA) U.S. Solar Market Insight Report, photovoltaic (PV) installations increased 41% nationwide since 2012. This pencils out to an increase of nearly fifteen times the installations six years ago, making solar the second largest source of new electricity behind natural gas. To date, there are over 445,000 PV systems operating in the states, with 140,000 of those installed in 2013.

The boost in PV installations created more than 10 new jobs every hour, as reported in The Solar Foundation’s National Solar Jobs Census. Nearly 143,000 workers joined the solar industry in 2013.

SEIA reported that the average price of solar panels declined 60 percent since 2011 making solar more affordable. Rebates and incentives are also making solar more attractive to Washington residents.

The financial incentives available for homeowners currently rank among the richest programs in the United States. Until 2016, there is a 30 percent federal tax credit for residential properties and no state sales tax on equipment or installation until 2018.

Additionally, local utilities offer production rebates. According to the Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency, Washington has one of the highest performance-based incentives in the world. Grid-interactive systems may receive production incentives ranging from $0.12 to $0.54/kWh or up to $5,000 per year. Multiplying factors of this incentive are based upon the electricity produced using equipment manufactured in Washington State.

Snohomish PUD customers are eligible for an additional one-time credit of $500 for every kWh installed, capped at $2,500, on qualifying units.

The return on investment, once taking ten years, is now closer to five to seven years. With Washington based panel manufactures offering a 25 year warranty and production expectancy of 35-40 years, anyone with initial funding would be hard pressed to turn down switching to solar.

With 50-60% projected growth in 2014, those in the solar industry like Miller are in for a positive fiscal year, making for a very bright future.

Source: Written by- Amanda Brock. Western Solar Inc. Marketing Director. July 2014.
Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 2:04 PM
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Labels: arlington solar, bellingham solar, mount vernon solar, seattle solar, sedro woolley, snohomish solar, solar installer, solar king county, Western Solar Inc

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Solar Panels Work Even in Cloudy Northwest

Yeah we have said it but we are going to let Craig from The Olympian tell you again. :-)

Overcast skies don’t stop photovoltaic cells from pumping out the watts

BY CRAIG SAILOR
craig.sailor@thenewstribune.comMay 28, 2014

At some point just about every homeowner gives a thought to solar energy. Who wouldn’t like to power their house with the sun, watch their electric meter run backwards and never pay for a kilowatt again?
And then the clouds set in. This is the Northwest, after all, not sunny Arizona.
But the sun finally is rising for good on solar power. Costs have come down, efficiency has gone up and financial incentives are increasing the return on investment.
MYTHBUSTING
In California, Hawaii or Arizona solar panels can be seen on many rooftops, but in the Northwest you’re more likely to see Sasquatch than a solar electric array. Dispelling the notion that there’s not enough sun to make a solar power system worthwhile is job number one for solar advocates.
Solar power will be one of the many topics covered at this weekend’s Mother Earth News Fair at the Washington State Fair Events Center in Puyallup. The two-day event focuses on living green. (See below for details.)
“It absolutely does work here,” Puget Sound Energy’s Jake Wade said of solar power. There’s no substitution for direct sunlight, he said. But summer’s long days and lower energy needs (compared with power sucking Phoenix and Las Vegas) enable solar-equipped customers to produce more power than they need.
High heat makes photovoltaic solar panels less efficient. So, the Northwest’s cool days help solar cells produce more energy.
And while overcast skies are not as productive as direct sun they make orientation and pitch of solar panels far less important. (The light is multidirectional.)
PSE has 2,021 solar producing customers. Solar energy now accounts for 1.13 percent of total U.S. capacity, according to figures just released by the U.S. Department of Energy. Since 2010 solar capacity increased by 418 percent across the nation.
NET ENERGY METERING
While Northwest summers might be a solar paradise what happens during winter’s short, dark days when the furnace runs day and night? That, say solar proponents, is when the beauty of net energy metering comes in to play.
NEM allows utility customers who generate their own renewable energy (including wind and hydro) to earn credits for surplus power they deliver to the grid. The Department of Energy cites NEM as one of the main drivers of the increased popularity of solar energy.
The system is simple. During the summer the energy a solar customer produces is sent back to the utility company. Meter discs actually spin backward. In the winter, when more energy is needed than produced, it’s subtracted from the customer’s account.
“It’s like using the utility as an infinitely efficient battery,” said Wade, who is PSE’s net metering program manager.
Some customers, if they have a big enough system and/or are energy conservative, wind up paying nothing for their electricity. However, they still pay a small monthly bill to the utility for service.
COST
Each 1,000 watts of PV solar panel produces about 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity per year. The typical home in Western Washington uses 900 to 1,000 kilowatt hours per month, Wade said. To be completely net zero that home would need an array that produced 10 to 12 kilowatts. The median size of a solar system for a PSE customer is 4 to 5 kilowatts, he said.
The biggest stumbling block for most solar power seekers is cost. A full system could set a homeowner back $30,000. But costs have dropped dramatically in recent years and have stabilized.
The solar panel industry is highly competitive. Federal prosecutors last week indicted five Chinese military officials for stealing industrial secrets from Hillsboro, Oregon, based solar panel manufacturer SolarWorld.
Other factors driving cost include choice of product and difficulty of installation.
TECH ADVANCES
The heart of any solar system is its PV cells. The delicate silicon-based wafers are interconnected and assembled in to sturdy panels, usually about 40 inches by 65 inches. Depending on manufacturer and model the panels can produce from 200 to 275 watts. After quality of the panels, buyers should be concerned with efficiency, price, warranty and aesthetics.
Panel maker SunPower sets the market record at 21.5 percent efficiency. That means that 21.5 percent of light hitting the cells is output as energy in ideal, laboratory conditions. That’s almost a doubling since the Carter administration when the president famously installed panels on the White House roof. They were later removed by President Ronald Reagan.
Scientists have recently announced the development of cells that absorb different wavelengths of sunlight and achieve efficiency in excess of 40 percent. But those cells are years from production and affordability. The development does mean that fewer cells will be needed to achieve the same power output of today’s systems.
Another breakthrough came in inverter efficiency. The inverter is what converts DC power (which the panels produce) to AC power (for home use.) Once at 80 percent efficiency they now run up to 97 percent.
Up until the early 2000s batteries were required but are now no longer needed. Batteries still can be added to a system but add cost and are not needed with NEM. Batteries are a must for off grid systems.
PLACEMENT
The optimum location for solar panels is a south facing, pitched roof. That takes advantage of the most light. A west facing roof is the next best choice but is 15 percent less productive.
A roof pitch of 30 to 35 degrees is optimum. (That equates to a roof rising 7 to 8 vertical inches over 12 linear inches.)
Even if a property owner has plenty of land a roof provides a ready-made, engineered structure and needs the least amount of wiring. At least 75 percent of customers place their panels on roofs. If a roof isn’t at the right pitch or orientation the panels can be racked to the correct placement. However, that will add to the cost.
Other locations include pole and ground mounted panels but both of those also add to installation costs. Some advanced pole systems allow the panels to track the sun through the day.
Some of Haffner’s clients get creative. He’s installed panels on car ports, pergolas and even on a chicken coop. David Lee attached an awning to his house made of solar panels. He plans on adding another soon.
Roof mounted systems come with flashing that prevents leaks. 
INCENTIVES
But wait, there’s more. If free power isn’t a strong enough attraction the financial incentives don’t end there.
Aside from NEM, Washington utility companies administer an incentive program that buys the energy produced by individuals and companies (up to $5,000 per participant per year) regardless of whether it goes to the grid or is used by the customer. If the solar equipment used is made in Washington, then the kilowatt hours produced is paid at 54 cents. If out-of-state equipment is used, then it drops to 15 cents.
Additionally, a solar power customer can take 30 percent of the system cost off their federal income tax bill. That means a $30,000 system would end up costing $21,000 after taxes. Furthermore, all parts and installation costs are sales-tax free in Washington.
When it comes time to sell your home a solar PV system will add to its value. The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory found in 2013 that a home with a solar system added $24,000 to its sale price compared with homes without systems.
PUSHBACK
Solar energy might be a victim of its own success. Utility companies have recently begun to push back against NEM in the Sun Belt states.
Politicians in California and other sunny states are under pressure from utilities and their lobbyists to retool incentive programs. The companies say renewable energy customers need to share the costs of energy transmission and distribution. Environmentalists say the traditional utility business models are under threat.
Wade said PSE is looking closely at the situations in the Sun Belt states. He acknowledges that the battles will be fought there before they come, if ever, to the Northwest. But, he said, PSE will not stand in the way of renewable energy.
“If this is the direction our customers are going then this is the direction we’re going.”
DO YOU HAVE A SUNNY FUTURE?
The cost of a solar power system is equivalent to that of a new car. But the technology and financial incentives have never been better. If you’re thinking of going solar consider these points:
Budget: Know what you want to spend before starting out.
Financing: Some financial institutions offer solar-based loans.
Staying power: Will you own your home long enough for it to pay off?
Your site: Survey trees and buildings that might block light to panels.
System: Roof, pole or ground mount.
Placement: Does your roof face south? Is it big enough to hold the panels you desire?
Roof: Is it in good shape or will it need to be replaced soon?
Contractors: Find those that deal only or mostly in solar. Make sure they are licensed and bonded.
References: Check them.
RESOURCES
Incentives
Database of State Incentives for Renewables & Efficiency: dsireusa.org
Washington state solar equipment manufacturers
Silicon Energy: silicon-energy.com
Itek Energy: itekenergy.com
WORKSHOPS
Mother Earth News Fair
Mother Earth News Fair at the Washington State Fair Events Center will feature more than 200 hands-on workshops that center on green living. Headlining speakers include actor and green advocate Ed Begley Jr., organic farmer Joel Salatin, Bob’s Red Mill founder Bob Moore and permaculturist Toby Hemenway.
When: Saturday, May 31 and Sunday, June 1
Where: Washington State Fair Events Center, Puyallup
Tickets: $25
Information: motherearthnews.com
If you are interested in learning more about solar and can't make it to the Mother Earth Fair, Western Solar will be hosting a free Solar 101 Workshop on June 12th.  Click here for more details and to register.  If you would like to schedule a free site assessment, click here.



Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/2014/05/28/3152965/solar-energy-getting-brighter.html#storylink=cpy



Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/2014/05/28/3152965/solar-energy-getting-brighter.html#storylink=cpy




Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/2014/05/28/3152965/solar-energy-getting-brighter.html#storylink=cpy
Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 7:30 AM
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Labels: bellingham solar, cost of solar, net metering, skagit solar, snohomish solar, solar energy, solar incentives, solar increases home value, solar manufacturers, solar resources, washington solar

Monday, May 12, 2014

Western Solar to host Free Solar 101 Workshop in Bellingham

June 12, 2014
5:30-7:00pm
ReSources (2309 Meridian St), Bellingham

Click here to RSVP.

This presentation hosted by Western Solar Inc and PSE (Whatcom County) will give you an overview of photovoltaic technology, how it works in the Pacific Northwest, the financial benefits, and available incentives.  A PSE (Whatcom County) Representative will also be available to discuss net-metering. 
Space is limited, RSVP today!
Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 2:53 PM
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Labels: bellingham solar, ferndale solar, lynden solar, solar bellingham, solar whatcom, solar workshop, Western Solar Inc, whatcom solar

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Western Solar's SOLAR SOCIAL!

June 5, 2014
4:30-6:30pm
319 E Champion Street, Bellingham


Mingle with fellow solar enthusiasts, speak to local energy experts, check out electric vehicles and enter to win $10K in prizes!

Displays and goodies provided by:

- Western Solar
- Aslan Brewing
- Itek Energy
- Puget Sound Energy
- The ReStore
- Explorations Academy
- Community Energy Challenge
- Wilson Motors
- KAFE 104.1
- Habitat for Humanity
- North Sound Electric Vehicle Association


For the latest event details, check out the event on Facebook.







Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 1:32 PM No comments:
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Labels: bellingham solar, bellingham solar social, skagit solar, solar social, Western Solar Inc

Monday, April 28, 2014

Average Annual Household Carbon Footprint - Whatcom County


Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 11:02 AM No comments:
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Labels: bellingham solar, blaine solar, carbon footprint, ferndale solar, lynden solar, solar whatcom, Western Solar Inc, whatcom county, whatcom solar
Location: Whatcom County, WA, USA

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Nissan Leaf Likely To Offer Larger Battery For Longer Range

Every electric-car owner wants more range; it's practically an immutable law.

Now Nissan executive Andy Palmer has come close to confirming that a longer-range Nissan Leaf is in the cards, though likely not until 2016 or even 2017.

In an interview at last week's New York Auto Show with Palmer, who is Nissan's product chief, he said offering multiple battery-pack options with different ranges in the Leaf was being debated internally.

In general, auto executives rarely discuss future powertrain offerings unless the technology being described is already on the way.

And it's notable that Nissan surveyed Leaf owners early this year, asking them how much more they would pay for a Leaf with a 150-mile range.
2014 Nissan Leaf
2014 Nissan Leaf

Multiple packs

Palmer noted that the Leaf electric car would be on a standard Nissan model cycle of updates every five or six years.

But he said the timing of updates was somewhat complicated by the significant updates made to the Leaf for 2013--just two years into its run--when production for the U.S. market shifted from Japan to Tennessee.

He called the idea of a longer-range Leaf the subject of "intense internal debate," with some parties feeling that the 2014 Leaf's rated range of 84 miles was enough for the vast majority of users--and others feeling that more U.S. buyers could be captured with a range in the triple digits.

In the end, Palmer suggested, there could be "two or even three" battery-pack options offered in future Leaf models--"varying by market" where the demand was strongest.

In the last several weeks, there's been much discussion of whether and when a Nissan Leaf with a longer-range battery option would hit the market.


Success for Nissan

The Leaf has done well for the company, Palmer said, with 85 percent of its buyers new to the Nissan brand (known as "conquests") and 80 percent of them retained within the brand for their next vehicle.

It is already the best-selling electric car in history, with 110,000 sold globally since December 2011.

And Nissan has aggressive goals for raising its sales--and adding more models.

In the market at large, lithium-ion cell prices are low due to overcapacity at the moment, with "intense price competition" among all cell makers.

But Palmer suggested that Nissan is seeing cost reductions greater than the 7-percent annual figure often proposed as the historic norm for small-format consumer cells over the past 20 years.

And that should lead to some exciting electric-car developments in next few years.

Source: Green Car Reports. John Voelcker. 4/21/14


Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 8:00 AM
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Labels: bellingham solar, electric car, Nissan Leaf, solar

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Concentrating Solar Power Under Fire

The Ivanpah CSP plant brought online in January has been heavily criticized for its environmental impacts, namely solar glare.

Utah, USA -- Currently the world’s largest solar thermal plant, the Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System has been in full operation less than two months and already concerns have been raised about its environmental impacts. Complaints from pilots flying near the concentrating solar power (CSP) plant state that on numerous occasions, the intense reflective glare coming from the plant’s heliostat mirrors has caused pilots to become momentarily blinded. Ivanpah is located roughly 40 miles from McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, and approximately 25 miles from the Jean Sport Aviation Center in Jean, Nevada.
While it might be easy to dismiss this issue as a “glaring” oversight on the part of its planners (Ivanpah is owned by BrightSource Energy and NRG Energy) further investigation reveals that issues of glint and glare from the plant’s reflective arrays were addressed during the Application for Certification submitted to the California Energy Commission in 2007. The first detailed analysis was included in a 2008 response from CH2M HILL to the CEC’s review of the application.
In their response, CH2M HILL stated that beam safe intensity calculations had been performed and that “the likelihood of random heliostat beam hazard to aircrafts flying in the area is infinitesimally remote.” CH2M HILL is a Colorado-based engineering company contracted by state and federal agencies for design and construction consultation.  CH2M HILL has offices in Bellingham and Bellevue, WA.
Subsequently, the Heliostat Positioning Plan and Tower Luminance Plan, which described even greater analyses of potential glare hazards, was submitted in 2013.
Frank “Tex” Wilkins, executive director of the Concentrating Solar Power Alliance and formerly of the Department of Energy, said the conversation about glare and CSP plants is not a new one. Wilkins took part in discussions in 2009 that looked into the issue. “The FAA convened a panel,” Wilkins said, “where extensive studies were performed on the topic. The final determination was made that glare from CSP plants, in particular glare from power towers, would not create an issue for pilots.”
Cause and Effect
Although it has been reported elsewhere that the incidents may have occurred as a result of pre-launch testing and repositioning of heliostats that took place in August of 2013 — which coincides with the same time frame during which two complaints were filed with the Federal Aviation Administration's Aviation Safety Reporting System — Clifford Ho of Sandia National Laboratories’ Concentrating Solar Technologies Department thinks otherwise.
“I believe some of the glare that’s being viewed is taking place when the heliostats are in a standby mode,” Ho said.
During peak daylight hours, it is common for a number of heliostat mirrors to be taken offline to prevent heliostats from directing more thermal energy to the turbine than it is capable of receiving. Ho said that during standby, these heliostats are focused on aim points next to the receiver, forming a ring of glare above the tower.
According to Ho, the sunlight reflected from heliostats that are in standby mode could be having an exacerbating effect on the amount of reflection being emitted.
In examining photos of the glare taken by passengers flying over the Ivanpah plant, Ho said it’s apparent to him the intense light is emanating from the heliostats not in use. “You can clearly see the difference between what’s just the diffuse reflection from the towers versus one or more heliostats that are in standby mode and reflecting light toward the observer.”
Ho has performed helicopter surveys of heliostats in standby mode at Sandia National Laboratories’ National Solar Thermal Test Facility. “It’s bright,” he said, emphasizing that the Sandia CSP array is much smaller than that of Ivanpah. “When you’re close, it can be like looking into the sun.”
Requests for Remedy and Possible Solutions
On March 10, the Clark County Department of Aviation (CCDOA) sent an official notification of complaint to BrightSource Energy, the California Bureau of Land Management, and the California Energy Commission. In the docket, the CCDOA requested that BrightSource take a number of actions to “respond to and address any complaints about adverse visual impacts to pilots.”
Included in the docket are requests for BrightSource Energy to take measurements of any observed glare and to determine if that glare is within the “maximum permissible exposure.” Ho indicated plans are already in motion to respond quickly.
“We will be doing some additional monitoring of the glare at the site,” Ho said. In addition to helicopter surveys of the area surrounding the Ivanpah plant, ground-based evaluations will also be performed.
One possible solution, as suggested by Ho, is to reposition heliostats that are in standby mode so that they stand vertically — thus reflecting the glare toward the ground instead of upward. Regardless of whether that’s done, Ho believes it is imperative that pilots are briefed on the location of the plant so that they will be aware of potential glare issues.
Ian Gregor, Public Affairs Manager for the Pacific Division of the FAA, concurs. “The FAA is aware of potential glare from concentrating solar plants and is exploring how to best alert pilots to the issue,” Gregor said. “The final Environmental Impact Statement for the Ivanpah project includes mitigation measures that address the issue of glare, which the aviation community raised during the EIS process.”
Sandia National Laboratories currently offers a Solar Glare Hazard Analysis Tool that Ho helped to create, which he says is fundamental to preventing similar issues from arising in future solar development projects. “The solution is to be aware of the potential issues of glare during the planning stage, to ensure it doesn’t become a hazard.”
Source: Vince Font, Contributing Editor, Renewable Energy World 
Posted by Western Solar, Inc. at 8:39 AM
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Labels: bellingham solar, Ivanpah, renewable energy, Renewable Energy World, solar
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