Spain's spectacular solar power plant
Spain's spectacular solar power plant
By Mail On Sunday Reporter
Last updated at 10:01 PM on 1st May 2010
Mention solar power and people imagine weedy photovoltaic panels blighting the roofs of eco-friendly households and generating barely enough electricity to run a toaster. But the future of solar power could well be a lot more spectacular

The original plant produces 11 megawatts of electricity; the new plant (left) will produce up to 20 megawatts. Each heliostat tracks the sun on two axes and concentrates the radiation onto a receiver located on the upper part of the 531ft tower
There are actually two solar power plants in the picture above, spread around two towers.
The larger array on the left, called PS20 by its Spanish owners Solucar, is still under construction; the smaller one on the right, PS10, is already supplying electricity to the local grid.
Both work by channelling the blazing sun of Seville (among the hottest places in the European mainland) into a searing beam of heat that boils water via a quartz window, generating enough steam to drive a series of turbines.

The heliostats (sun-tracking mirrors) outside Seville
Around 92 per cent of the Sun's heat is converted directly into electricity - and the amount of energy produced by such plants can be so intense that eco-energy advocates claim it can be used to separate hydrogen from water to drive eco-friendly cars.
All you need is enough sunlight - and rather a lot of sun-tracking mirrors, also known as heliostats.
In fact, PS10 has 624 of them, which concentrate enough energy onto a single point to deliver 11 megawatts of power, enough for about 5,500 homes. The PS20 plant has 1,255 heliostats and will produce up to 20 megawatts when fully operational in 2013.

A solar trough (another technology being tested at the site)
The energy produced is expensive - around three times the price of energy from normal methods - but the technology is flourishing, and prices are likely to plunge, with new plants worldwide including one in the Mojave desert using 1.2 million mirrors.
Others are planned in Morocco and Algeria. Unsurprisingly, there are no plans for a similarly spectacular solar power plant here in Britain...

Lifting the heliostats into place
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive ... plant.html
By Mail On Sunday Reporter
Last updated at 10:01 PM on 1st May 2010
Mention solar power and people imagine weedy photovoltaic panels blighting the roofs of eco-friendly households and generating barely enough electricity to run a toaster. But the future of solar power could well be a lot more spectacular

The original plant produces 11 megawatts of electricity; the new plant (left) will produce up to 20 megawatts. Each heliostat tracks the sun on two axes and concentrates the radiation onto a receiver located on the upper part of the 531ft tower
There are actually two solar power plants in the picture above, spread around two towers.
The larger array on the left, called PS20 by its Spanish owners Solucar, is still under construction; the smaller one on the right, PS10, is already supplying electricity to the local grid.
Both work by channelling the blazing sun of Seville (among the hottest places in the European mainland) into a searing beam of heat that boils water via a quartz window, generating enough steam to drive a series of turbines.

The heliostats (sun-tracking mirrors) outside Seville
Around 92 per cent of the Sun's heat is converted directly into electricity - and the amount of energy produced by such plants can be so intense that eco-energy advocates claim it can be used to separate hydrogen from water to drive eco-friendly cars.
All you need is enough sunlight - and rather a lot of sun-tracking mirrors, also known as heliostats.
In fact, PS10 has 624 of them, which concentrate enough energy onto a single point to deliver 11 megawatts of power, enough for about 5,500 homes. The PS20 plant has 1,255 heliostats and will produce up to 20 megawatts when fully operational in 2013.

A solar trough (another technology being tested at the site)
The energy produced is expensive - around three times the price of energy from normal methods - but the technology is flourishing, and prices are likely to plunge, with new plants worldwide including one in the Mojave desert using 1.2 million mirrors.
Others are planned in Morocco and Algeria. Unsurprisingly, there are no plans for a similarly spectacular solar power plant here in Britain...

Lifting the heliostats into place
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/moslive ... plant.html
The Map Is Not The Territory, The Word Is Not The Object....
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Those bowls are huge! That's one way to go parabolic. I'm thinking there would be some cost benefit to digging a bowl over making big frames, but I think the future of parabolic is on a smaller-scale multi collection point. There are some nice arrays in the west US, but they're still pretty big. When it comes to surface coverage, closer to the ground = less expensive.
And the thing about it is that it can get way cheaper the more other companies get into the game. Eventually electricity would be dirt cheap, using pre-existing technology. It would still be necessary to have central steam plants, as opposed to everyone being off grid, but you would have that choice. You can already find $20,000 dishes using stirling engines that promise to pay off in 6 years! It can get much cheaper.
And the thing about it is that it can get way cheaper the more other companies get into the game. Eventually electricity would be dirt cheap, using pre-existing technology. It would still be necessary to have central steam plants, as opposed to everyone being off grid, but you would have that choice. You can already find $20,000 dishes using stirling engines that promise to pay off in 6 years! It can get much cheaper.
- Newearthman

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- Posts: 4803
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Now thats something to be proud of!

"Man in the world of technocracy has never yet invented anything that is not already present in nature"
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