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Solar electricity in Alaska

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    Solar electricity in Alaska

    Solar energy has become so accessible that new farms are being switched on in the most unexpected places – including in the depths of the Alaskan winter. By Jody Ellis
    19th February 2020



    ""The temperature gauge on my car reads a frosty -16C (3F) as I pull off the highway and onto the side road next to the Willow solar farm, about 50 miles north of Anchorage, Alaska. The panels, ice-covered behemoths that rise starkly against the still-dark sky, are incongruous sight in the snowy landscape. And considering that the sun is just peeking over the mountains at 9:00am, it also feels like a highly impractical venture. Standing in the middle of the farm, freezing cold, slipping on the ice, it is not what you expect when visiting the largest and newest solar farm in the state.

    In northerly regions like Alaska, where daylight hours are minimal for a good portion of the year, the use of solar power seems improbable, if not impossible. Nearly 85% of land in the state has at least some level of permafrost and even in the southern regions, winter months receive minimal daylight. But this solar farm in Willow, is one of those proving that solar can work even in the most unexpected cold and northerly climates.Sited a few hundred miles south of the Arctic Circle, the Willow farm gets less than six hours of daylight during the winter months. In January, the Alaskan solar company Renewable IPP switched this 10-acre farm on, making it the largest in the state. Its output is expected to be 1.35 megawatt hours per year – enough to provide power for about 120 average homes year-round. The farm is made up of 11 rows of panels, nine 133 kW rows and two smaller 70kW rows that were the farm’s pilot project.The pace of climate change in the Arctic and its surroundings is much greater than other parts of the world, leading to an urgent need to reduce the use of fossil fuels and expand renewable energy options. Renewable’s four founding business partners met while working in Alaska’s oil industry. The four shared a mutual interest in renewable energy, with some of them having experimented with DIY solar projects at home. After generating power for their own homes, they wanted to find a way to expand solar within the state.

    “We chose to go with a utility scale solar project, as we felt that would provide the biggest impact,” says Jenn Miller, chief executive of Renewable. “We got out and drove piles and built frames, which was great because we were able to learn a lot, figure out potential design problems and make changes to create the most efficient model possible.”
    Solar viability is a function of two things: solar resource and electricity prices – Jenn Miller
    Their pilot project of two rows of 70 kW panels suggested that the farm would work on a larger scale. The first rows went in during the summer of 2018, and after eight months, the costs came in on target, says Chris Colbert, chief finance officer of Renewable. “We monitored production throughout the year, which also came in on target,” he says. That made it easier for them to get the attention of investors to allow them to expand.

    “Solar viability is a function of two things: solar resource and electricity prices,” says Miller. Alaska’s electricity prices are almost double the US average, creating a great deal of interest in alternative technologies. And, perhaps surprisingly, on average Alaska is a sunny place.Renewable’s farm may be the largest in Alaska, but it isn’t the most northerly; Fairbanks’ Golden Valley Electric Association (GVEA) is a three-acre solar farm around 200 miles from the Arctic Circle. While there are smaller farms and solar set-ups further north still, GVEA’s farm is one of the largst at this latitude in the state.

    GVEA began building the farm in 2018 after two years of research, settling on a piece of land that it already owned and is situated right behind one of their substations. The farm was up and running as of October 2018, creating enough solar energy to power approximately 70 homes.
    In months like December, when it’s really dark, we just let the snow build up, as there isn’t enough daylight to warrant snow clearing – Jenn Miller
    Once installed, the operating costs for solar farms are minimal, another aspect that is attractive to investors and builders. There is, however, one thing that northerly solar farms have to contend with that their southern counterparts don’t. Willow averages 2.2 metres (87 inches) of snow per year, which means solar panels can end up blanketed in snow and ice during the winter months.

    “We have had to hire people for snow removal,” says Renewable’s Miller. “But in months like December, when it’s really dark, we just let the snow build up, as there isn’t enough daylight to warrant snow clearing. As we move into spring, when we are starting to get more hours of sun, we will come out and clear snow frequently.” At GVEA, they have the same philosophy on snow removal, leaving the panels buried during the least productive winter months and beginning scraping around February.

    Another solution has been finding the optimal panel angle to help with snow removal. The snow will simply slide off the more sharply angled panels. According to Miller, 45 degrees is the preferred angle for optimum energy production at the Willow farm, which is also a steep enough slope to help snow slide off the panels.

    Renewable is also working with the University of Alaska, as part of the Alaska Center for Energy and Power solar technology program, on testing clear coatings that can be applied to panels to make them slippery and so shed snow more easily. Miller says that this year there hasn’t been enough snow cover to properly test the coatings, but they are hopeful that they will mean less maintenance for the facility.Besides the snow, a limitation of northerly solar is not necessarily the amount of energy produced but the time of year that it’s available: peak production does not match peak energy use. “In Alaska, we don’t generally use air conditioning in homes,” says Tom DeLong, board chairman of GVEA. “So in the summer months, when production is at its highest, actual kilowatt hours sales are at their lowest. And in December, when people are using more energy for heat, more electricity, we get next to nothing from our panels.”
    We make more in one day in June than we make for the entire month of December – Sam Dennis
    Lower output in winter is true across the board for the farms, with Renewable showing winter output as low as 30 kWh, dipping to zero when the panels are fully covered in snow. On the flipside of that, during the summer months, when it’s light for upwards of 18 hours a day, output can exceed 8,000 kWh per day. Sam Dennis, chief operating officer at Renewable, says: “We make more in one day in June than we make for the entire month of December.”

    The reflection of the sun off the snow on the ground in spring also helps with output. “We get a lot of reflective light from the snow in the early spring months,” he says. “This helps increase output. Last year in March our best day generated an output of 800 kilowatts.”

    Despite the limitation of lower output during the winter months, solar energy is being welcomed as a partial solution to reduce carbon emissions in the north. Finding local solutions is especially pressing given the rate at which the Arctic is experiencing climate change.

    “Arctic regions often experience warming above the global mean,” says Shyla Raghav, a climate change adaptation and mitigation expert at Conservation International. “Solar power can help reduce dependence on fossil fuels and can be installed off-grid, on-grid, or via a hybrid system.”While the energy produced by solar farms is fully renewable, there is a carbon cost to installing the farms – there has been some concern over the carbon footprint of solar farms, but both Miller and Raghav say the benefit outweighs carbon cost. “Our solar farm pays back the carbon footprint associated with manufacturing and construction, to include tree clearing, in three to five years. And a solar farm has an expected life span of 30 years,” says Miller.

    “It’s important to consider the entire life-cycle of energy use and emissions, to include manufacturing,” adds Raghav. “Most studies that evaluate solar and wind alongside coal and other fossil fuels have found that renewable energy has a considerably more favourable carbon footprint.”

    Declining costs associated with solar energy is also an incentive. Whereas solar was initially expensive to generate, costs have dropped precipitously and continue to do so. Overall, the cost of solar panels has consistently fallen in the past 40 years. Even since the first Willow farm panels went in, prices have dropped. “Our panels for our pilot project are 340 watts,” says Miller. “The new panels are 370 watt and were 10% cheaper than the pilot panels. That’s in one year.” Miller anticipates costs for future projects to continue to go down as solar power becomes more affordable.

    Miller says solar use in Alaska is on the rise. According to data from Alaska’s Solarize Anchorage campaign, in 2018 just 33 homes had solar installed. As of 2019, that number had jumped to 163.

    As the cost of solar has fallen, it has become cheaper than fossil fuels such as coal. “This means we not only have a positive environmental impact, but a competitive, positive economic impact,” says Chris Colbert. The Renewable team plan to expand in the coming years, and is currently looking for sites for their next solar project, which they anticipate will occupy 50 to 100 acres. They hope a farm this size could provide power for 1,000 homes.

    The prospect of affordable renewable energy even in these icy northern regions is a mark of just how far solar power has come."

    #2
    [QUOTE=TOM4CWB;480146]Solar energy has become so accessible that new farms are being switched on in the most unexpected places – including in the depths of the Alaskan winter. By Jody Ellis
    19th February 2020...Miller says solar use in Alaska is on the rise. According to data from Alaska’s Solarize Anchorage campaign, in 2018 just 33 homes had solar installed. As of 2019, that number had jumped to 163.

    As the cost of solar has fallen, it has become cheaper than fossil fuels such as coal. “This means we not only have a positive environmental impact, but a competitive, positive economic impact,” says Chris Colbert. The Renewable team plan to expand in the coming years, and is currently looking for sites for their next solar project, which they anticipate will occupy 50 to 100 acres. They hope a farm this size could provide power for 1,000 homes.

    The prospect of affordable renewable energy even in these icy northern regions is a mark of just how far solar power has come. From tentative, expensive origins, it has reached as far as Alaska in the US – and elsewhere, even further north. If solar is proving viable even here, then it is perhaps not just a glimmer of sunlight across a frozen landscape, but also a glimmer of hope."



    "
    https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200219-the-solar-farms-fighting-climate-change-in-alaska

    If distribution costs and taxes rise enough... Solar electricity generation will become profitable... especially when we can create NH3 directly from this solar electricity.[Tom4cwb]

    Comment


      #3
      That's a great piece but the reality is in the months of Dec Jan and Feb what do they use to keep warm when its -56 and DARK. I had a nephew who flew up there for four years. You need a light source to keep you balanced as it is dark all the time. Cold is cold you bundle up but the lack of light affects people. So without solar what do they need. Simple really

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by SASKFARMER View Post
        ... So without solar what do they need. Simple really
        Click image for larger version

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        Friction?

        Comment


          #5
          Tom. Your lucky SF didn't tell you to cut off your electricity and gas supply and go off grid because you posted a pro solar article? LOL

          In a remote community in the north where diesel generators provide electricity imagine what happens when you install a solar system that provides a lot of electricity during the very sunny long days of summer?

          You don't need to burn as much diesel and you save the cost of bringing in expensive fuel!

          Comment


            #6
            Chuck if you knew tom he isn't in Alaska.

            But yea the article should shut down the power supply in winter lets see how well they do. Im sure heating a farm in the middle of know where Alaska is really the pollution climate change problem vs Toronto or Montreal or Vancouver stacked on rats.

            Comment


              #7
              That article makes perfect sense and is even pretty well balanced about uplifting benefits versus the unfortunate shortcomings.

              But someone please gently direct me to a fair assessment of the particular concern of "storage".


              When the article rightly concludes its impractical (read that futile) to remove the snow in December (note it should also obviously added January etc)....during the coldest and most important time to have electrical lights and all things that are near essentially powered by electricity...why doesn't that make the backup power supply (also know as the one you totally have to rely on during month long periods as well as all non-daylight hours etc.) and especially when that coincides when you need it most in harshest months. This is all leading to the COST and present Death (that should read dearth) of adequate or available or practical STORAGE. Not even for hours; but for weeks and months.

              And does that also not make the backup supply (more properly known as the required and needed essential dependable 24 hour life and convenience providing conventional generation) made even more expensive because it is delegated to still being 100% necessary due to the present lack of storage. That an argument that the dependable power supply fixed costs still remain but being deliberately idled and probably becoming concurrently less efficient through fault of a usurper.


              I would argue that what is not mentioned , and is missing and deliberately ignored in the article.....is the issue of cost; carbon footprint; current lack of availability. and other associated factors of that necessary storage to complete a better electrical grid.

              In FACT The question should be IS SOLAR IN ALASKA ( or any where in the world)) close to being cheaper if the necessary backup is ignored as it is in this particular case. And also every solar solution to population scale electrical needs ever advocated should be weighed using the same scale. Too many "scales" mentioned???? Well then reread because not everything can be weighed properly if the associated wrappings aren't added in or subtracted off.

              And don't get me wrong. Any system that can provide what everyone needs and expects of conventional electrical generation and can be done at a truly cheaper overall "cost of all kinds"... is the day we should celebrate the demise of natural gas or fossil fuels or nuclear or solar or geothermal or those things that don't measure up to ideal standards. But beware there are particular cases where any solution has it own niche advantages; so lets be careful about celebrating final demises..
              Last edited by oneoff; Dec 23, 2020, 08:53.

              Comment


                #8
                Why, just the other day, my GMC Sierra 1500 4x4 hit 50 mpg coasting down a long hill, with a fully loaded box! (After hitting "reset")

                With that kind of efficiency, why doesn't everyone drive one?

                Comment


                  #9
                  A person should learn to stay away from arguments on agriville... but looked at as a debate maybe there should be even more people join in. The devil is in the details maybe....

                  Tom's article states QUOTE And considering that the sun is just peeking over the mountains at 9:00am, it also feels like a highly impractical venture. QUOTE





                  Well Alaska appears on the globe at a higher elevation than either Brooks AB or Saskatoon SK; and Saskatoon and Brooks most likely don't have mountains blocking the horizon to the same extent;if at all.

                  Further there may be what is known as time zones and even daylight saving time... but that is cancelled by the undeniable total daylight potential hours of solar production; DST or not or time zone etc. Any mountain range could have somewhat of sunlight blocking effect at either sunrise or sunset. When the article conjures up sun rays cresting over a mountain top; a reader concludes the mountain is blocking what could have been the horizon. And increasing northern latitudes, have been brainwashed into us as producing various fractions of next to perpetual darkness at this time of year.

                  What isn't evident to an inobservant reader is that just because the sun peaks above the horizon still means that the solar inverter; for over at least an hour period; both after sunrise and before sunset; can be predicted with certainty to only be able to produce be some tens or hundreds of Watts instead of maybe the more impressive Kilowatts for minutes or a very few hours around midday. At the Saskatoon solar demonstration website not much happens at all before 10:30 am and beginning shutting down at between 3pm and over with by 4:00 pm


                  I would suspect that Alaska at this same time of year just can 't avoid the harsh rules of the earths tilt and rotational period. Show me the data that shows any 9:00am solar production (worth any reporting) ; and if you can; then at least admit that there was an earlier one hour rampdown period at the end of the day than data at other solar sites (even located at a latitude more ideal than Alaska's latitude.
                  Last edited by oneoff; Dec 23, 2020, 08:50.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by oneoff View Post
                    A person should learn to stay away from arguments on agriville... but looked at a debates maybe there should be even more peopple join in. The devil is in the details maybe....

                    Tom's article states QUOTE And considering that the sun is just peeking over the mountains at 9:00am, it also feels like a highly impractical venture. QUOTE





                    Well Alaska appears on the globe a at a higher elevation than either Brooks AB or Saskatoon SK; and Saskatoon and Brooks most likely don't have mountains interfering with sunrise peaking over the mountains"

                    Further there may be what is known as time zones and even daylight saving time... but that is cancelled by the undeniable total daylight potential hours of solar production; DST or not or time zone etc. Any mountain range would have somewhat of sunlight blocking effect at either sunrise or sunset. And increasing northern latitudes, have been brainwashed into us as producing various fractions of next to perpetual darkness at this time of year.

                    What isn't evident to an inobsevant reader is that just because the sun peaks above the horizon still means that the solar inverter; for over at least an hour period; both after sunrise and before sunset; can be predicted with certainty to only be able to produce be some tens or hundreds of Watts instead of maybe the more impressive Kilowatts for minutes or a very few hours around midday. At the Saskatoon solar demonstration website not much happens at all before 10:30 am and beginning shutting down at between 3pm and over with by 4:00 pm


                    I would suspect that Alaska at this same time of year just can 't avoid the harsh rules of the earths tilt and rotational period. Show me the data that shows any 9:00am solar production (worth any reporting) ; and if you can; then at least admit that there was an earlier one hour rampdown period at the end of the day than data at other solar sites (even located at a latitude more ideal than Alaska's latitude.
                    Here is my thought Oneoff, Libidiots and environuts argue that all we need is cheap battery storage and solar and wind will make all other forms of electrical generation uneconomical. As you point out this clearly shows during the dead of winter in Alaska solar power production is 0 for not hours or days but months. No battery storage system can work in this situation. And what is missing from the whole costing equation for solar is the necessity of a second generator and how the intermittent use of the second generator affects it costs of operation. The cost of solar power production should take into account these costs!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Farming 101 posted a real time dashboard from an island off Tasmania, King Island that is using renewables to reduce diesel generation. Take a look. Here is the website:

                      https://www.hydro.com.au/clean-energy/hybrid-energy-solutions/success-stories/king-island https://www.hydro.com.au/clean-energy/hybrid-energy-solutions/success-stories/king-island

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Yes chuck and lots on the Big Island in Hawaii is run by solar. Wonder why wake up sun shines and is hot and bright and maybe the odd cloud then the north coast has wind like southern Alberta. Its also in the middle of the Pacific ocean with zero oil and gas.

                        So yea it works.

                        Not Canada that frozen 6 months of the year with min sun and min 40 temps.

                        **** man your not that smart are you.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                          Farming 101 posted a real time dashboard from an island off Tasmania, King Island that is using renewables to reduce diesel generation. Take a look. Here is the website:

                          https://www.hydro.com.au/clean-energy/hybrid-energy-solutions/success-stories/king-island https://www.hydro.com.au/clean-energy/hybrid-energy-solutions/success-stories/king-island
                          As I stated above:

                          When the technology becomes economically available... to turn electricity into NH3... this presents a carbon free life building block and energy dense fuel to allow our civilization to prosper! Merry Christmas and all the Blessings of wisdom and Love in 2021! The light of the world shines!

                          [John 1:] 9The true light that gives light to everyone was coming into the world. 10He was in the world, and though the world was made through him, the world did not recognise him. 11He came to that which was his own, but his own did not receive him. 12Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God – 13children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God.
                          14The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the one and only Son, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by SASKFARMER View Post
                            Yes chuck and lots on the Big Island in Hawaii is run by solar. Wonder why wake up sun shines and is hot and bright and maybe the odd cloud then the north coast has wind like southern Alberta. Its also in the middle of the Pacific ocean with zero oil and gas.

                            So yea it works.

                            Not Canada that frozen 6 months of the year with min sun and min 40 temps.

                            **** man your not that smart are you.
                            You should stick to ****tail recipes. LOL

                            So the wind doesn't blow or the sun doesn't shine in winter here?
                            Last edited by chuckChuck; Dec 23, 2020, 09:34.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Again chuck total daylight is what 8 hours at this time of year.

                              Wind when its -40 is usually zero.

                              So again 6 months of the year were basically artic.

                              You know that your not that stupid but you love Trudeau and his magic bag of beans.

                              All the best now cut the grid off and tell me in spring how well you survived.

                              **** man grow a pair and actually cut the chord.

                              Comment

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