The Department of the Interior and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) announced the approval of a proposal to construct and operate the largest solar project in U.S. history.
U.S. Secretary of the Interior David L. Bernhardt signed the Record of Decision (ROD) for Solar Partners XI, LLC to construct a 690-MW photovoltaic (PV) solar electric generating facility and ancillary facilities near Las Vegas.
The estimated $1 billion Gemini Solar Project could be the eighth-largest power facility in the world once completed.
The project will include a 34.5 kV overhead and underground collector lines, a 2-acre (0.8-hectare) operation and maintenance facility, three substations, internal access roads, access roads along generation tie-lines, a perimeter road, perimeter fencing, water storage tanks for fire protection, drainage control features, a potential on-site water well or a new water pipeline and improvements to the existing NV Energy facilities to support interconnection.
Also, a 380-MW/1400MWh battery system will enable the project to store energy.
The project will facilitate infrastructure investments that aim to create jobs and economic activity as well as increase renewable energy to meet Federal and state energy goals, according to the press release.
The on-site construction workforce is anticipated to average 500 to 700 construction workers, with a peak of 900 workers. The first phase of the multi-phased project could begin in 2021 with completion as early as 2022. Federal revenues are expected to be $3 million annually to the U.S. Treasury.
The BLM and Solar Partners XI, LLC have also developed measures to avoid, minimize and mitigate impacts of other resources including visual resources, cultural and tribal resources, recreation access and air quality. ■
Modified arctic air combined with a moisture-laden area of low pressure along the Gulf Coast will continue to allow for a broad area of winter weather impacts from the Lower Mississippi Valley to the Southeast today into early Saturday morning.