Enterprise Solar Farm Explained

Enterprise Solar Farm
Country:United States
Location:Iron County
Coordinates:37.6411°N -113.6125°W
Owner:Dominion Renewable Energy
Operator:Swinerton Renewable Energy
Status:O
Construction Began:July 2015
Commissioned:August 2016
Cost:~$163 million
Solar Type:Flat-panel PV
single-axis tracking
Ps Site Area:650acres
Ps Electrical Cap Fac:31.9% (average 2017-2019)
Ps Annual Generation:223 GW·h, 343 MW·h/acre

The Enterprise Solar Farm is an 80 MWAC (105 MWp) photovoltaic power station located about 25 miles west of Cedar City, Utah in Iron County. The project was developed by SunEdison, built by Mortenson Construction, and commissioned in September 2016.[1] The electricity is being sold under a 20-year power purchase agreement to Rocky Mountain Power which serves customers in Utah, Idaho, and Wyoming.[2] [3] [4]

Project details

Planning was initiated by the independent renewable energy developer First Wind (founded 2002) which began expanding into photovoltaic energy around 2012.[5] The Enterprise Solar Farm comprises a minority of the 320MW Four Brothers Project, which also includes the three co-located 80 MW Escalante Solar Project units located about 5 miles north of Milford, Utah in Beaver County. The land area for each 80 MW unit ranges from 600 to 700 acres.

First Wind and its extensive portfolio of assets in western Utah were acquired by SunEdison and its TerraForm Power yield co in November 2014.[6] Beginning construction at the time was the 20.2 MW Seven Sisters Project, a dispersed set of ~3 MW facilities throughout Beaver and Iron counties.[7] [8] To finance construction of Four Brothers, SunEdison entered into a joint venture with Dominion Resources. The resulting entity, Dominion Renewable Energy, utilized $150 million from SunEdison and $500 million from Dominion to start construction in July 2015.[9] Likewise, the two companies extended their joint venture to construct the 210 MW Three Cedars Project, which consists of three similarly sized facilities dispersed to the west of Cedar City, on about the same timeline.[10]

Four Brothers was built by Mortenson Construction.[11] SunEdison provided about 1.3 million crystalline silicon solar panels from its team of international suppliers. Work progressed simultaneously at all four sites, employed an estimated 500 workers, and was completed in September 2016. Along with the electricity to power about 90,000 homes, Four Brothers is expected to produce $66 million in property and income taxes for the region over 20 years. The completed facilities are operated and maintained by Swinerton Renewable Energy.[12]

SunEdison filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on April 21, 2016, but was able to complete the project on time with its receipt of $300 million in bankruptcy debt financing.[13] On September 13, 2016 the company was forced to sell its stake in the completed facilities in a fire sale. NRG Energy was the successful bidder.[14]

Electricity production

Generation (MW·h) of Enterprise Solar [15]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Total
201619,444 22,355 25,675 21,539 21,333 16,319 13,314 10,288140,267
20179,059 13,387 20,048 22,019 26,244 28,692 21,376 20,487 18,313 19,262 13,251 12,128224,267
201811,689 13,747 17,776 21,543 24,826 26,680 23,255 23,218 22,315 16,640 13,716 9,931225,336
201911,444 12,059 17,964 21,148 22,515 25,325 23,971 24,402 20,143 19,800 12,306 8,970220,046
Average Annual Production (years 2017-2019) :223,216

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 530 MW-AC of solar projects come online in Utah . pv-magazine-usa.com . November 3, 2016 . February 3, 2019 .
  2. Web site: PacifiCorp approved for 320MW of new solar in Utah . generationhub.com . October 10, 2014 . February 3, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190204014930/http://generationhub.com/pages/article_print.php?aid=2014%2F10%2F13%2Fpacificorp-approved-for-320-mw-of-new-solar-in-uta . February 4, 2019 . dead .
  3. Web site: Utah Solar Projects . Dominion Energy . March 13, 2019.
  4. Web site: EIA Electricity Data Browser - Utah . US Energy Information Administration . eia.gov . February 2, 2019 .
  5. Web site: First Wind, Rocky Mountain Power Agree PPA for ‘Four Brothers’ Solar Development . solarbuildermag.com . June 19, 2014 . February 3, 2019 .
  6. Web site: SunEdison, TerraForm Buy First Wind for $2.4B to Become Renewable Project Giant . greentechmedia.com . November 17, 2014 . February 3, 2019 .
  7. Web site: SunEdison Breaks Ground On 22.6 MW Seven Sisters Solar Power Plants In Utah . April 8, 2015 . February 3, 2019 .
  8. Web site: Seven Sisters Projects Come to Stellar Completion . November 13, 2015 . February 3, 2019 .
  9. Web site: SunEdison Partners with Dominion for 420-MW "Four Brothers" PV Project in Utah . energytrend.com . August 13, 2015 . February 3, 2019 .
  10. Web site: SunEdison, Dominion Partner on 265 Megawatt Three Cedars Solar Project in Utah . utahpulse.com . September 9, 2015 . February 3, 2019 .
  11. Web site: Four Brothers Solar Project . Mortenson . mortenson.com . February 3, 2019 .
  12. Web site: Swinerton Renewable Energy - Projects . February 15, 2019.
  13. Web site: SunEdison files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy . Bomey . Nathan . April 21, 2016 . USA TODAY . February 3, 2019.
  14. Web site: NRG snatches up 2.1 GW of SunEdison projects . September 13, 2016 . pv-magazine-usa.com . February 3, 2019.
  15. Web site: Enterprise Solar, Monthly . Electricity Data Browser . . March 11, 2019.