Boiling Point: Farewell to Ivanpah, the world's ugliest solar plant [between LA and Las Vegas]
Case in point: the Ivanpah solar project. Maybe youve seen the unsightly, blindingly bright towers while traveling from L.A. to Las Vegas, in the Mojave Desert near the California-Nevada state line. Maybe youve read about birds getting fried to death as they fly through the sunlight directed to the tops of the towers by fields of mirrors.
When state officials agreed to let Pacific Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison buy power from Ivanpah roughly 15 years ago, they saw this type of technology known as concentrated solar power as the future of renewable energy. It was expensive, but it would get cheaper over time and therefore it made sense to let PG&E and Edison customers pay for it through their electric rates, state officials decided.
Federal officials made a similar bet, helping finance Ivanpah through $1.6 billion in loan guarantees.
They were all wrong. Ivanpahs concentrated solar technology, which uses sunlight to heat a fluid and generate steam, never worked as well as expected. Meanwhile, solar photovoltaic panels that convert sunlight directly to electricity got super cheap. Ivanpah quickly became known as an expensive, bird-killing eyesore.
All of which led to PG&Es surprise announcement this month that it had struck a deal with the plants owners to stop buying electricity from Ivanpah. Assuming that state officials sign off which they most likely will, because the deal will lead to lower bills for PG&E customers two of the three towers will shut down come 2026.
https://www.latimes.com/environment/newsletter/2025-01-27/boiling-point-farewell-to-ivanpah-the-worlds-ugliest-solar-plant-boiling-point
OR https://archive.ph/0Eyw5