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Syllogism19 t1_j8zc90y wrote

> Texas is a dominant state for utility-scale solar project construction, with 28 projects totaling 6.7 GW in capacity, with about 240 MW as an average project size. The state’s largest active project is 500 MW.

It is nice to see something uplifting happening in Texas.

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r0botdevil t1_j8zgofu wrote

Great Scott intensifies

That's enough to send Marty back to the future 20.66 times!

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Totaliasim t1_j8zq4c1 wrote

All southern sunny states should be building solar. Up here in the real biggest state solar panels are a waste, but our local power is hydro with all the mountains, so that feels nice.

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toesy t1_j8zv2f3 wrote

So ~6.25 GW to the grid…

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Jeffcor13 t1_j90qnni wrote

This is cool to see. Has solar power been been cancelled in Florida yet? Hopefully not.

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RudyRusso t1_j91ch33 wrote

37% of Texas energy is from renewable sources. 23% is wind, 10% Nuclear, and 4% is solar.

While conservative politicians bitch about clean energy, Texas because of its geography as a basin makes for great wind energy. Also, not all that clean energy makes it to where it needs to go, as west Texas wind projects are not necessarily connected to east Texas Metros.

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Yourbubblestink t1_j91ckyq wrote

Somebody’s buying up cheap land in Maine, cutting down the woods, and putting up solar panel farms. I think they’re absolutely awful. They seem to be complete eyesores, and I’m really questioning their value given the amount of natural destruction.

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sault18 t1_j92u8kp wrote

You are absolutely lying about what these projects are doing:

"Syncarpha’s 7-MW project in Old Town will be leasing land from the city to construct an array on Dewitt Airfield. This land, currently vacant, unused and untaxed and with little agricultural value, will now be a stream of rental income for the city over the next 20-years.

In Readfield, Syncarpha and a property owner struck an unusual agreement, whereby the owner will put approximately 75 of 95 acres into conservation. The remaining acreage will be leased to Syncarpha for the construction and operation of a community solar farm.

The power generated by this array will benefit households in the same utility “load zone,” ensuring that the land is not subject to permanent commercial development. After the operational life of the solar farm, equipment will be removed and the portion used for solar will be put into conservation as well.

Syncarpha has purchased rocky land located next to a highway in Augusta to build a solar farm, but will not develop the entire parcel. The project is donating approximately 10 acres of woodlands to the Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine, its largest sportsman’s organization, for the alliance’s outdoor education center."

https://www.solarpowerworldonline.com/2021/06/syncarpha-capital-developing-community-solar-project-portfolio-in-maine/

"Five years in the making, the 152-megawatt solar farm is one of many ongoing renewable energy projects geared toward meeting Maine’s statutory target of 80-percent clean energy by 2030.

The land is owned by Bessey Development Co., a Hinckley-based, family-owned wood brokerage company, and has been in the Bessey family for more than five generations. Most of the land was previously used for commercial timber harvesting, and some of it was used by a tenant farmer to grow corn.

In compliance with the state’s conservation policies to reduce environmental effects, the company has conserved 1,875 acres — including 1,020 acres in what’s called the Unity Wetlands Focus Area, 324 acres in Readfield and 531 acres in Shirley."

https://spectrumlocalnews.com/me/maine/news/2022/11/17/construction-begins-on-maine-s-largest-solar-farm

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Yourbubblestink t1_j92vl11 wrote

Drive by a couple and check in with yourself after see if you feel the same way? - a Google Searches don’t really do it Justice - so ugly and unnatural. Maine getting covered with them because land is relatively cheap

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sault18 t1_j92vs4q wrote

No, they're conserving more land than they're actually using for these things. A lot of the land isn't even forrested to begin with like you're trying to make people believe. And some of this supposedly forested land is actually for Timber production, not entirely Greenfield areas. So you're leaving out a lot of the story and it's clear you have an agenda that you're trying to push. People aren't buying it.

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toesy t1_j92zkun wrote

The average capacity factor for solar is ~25%, this means that if you have a solar system of 100 GW it’s only producing 25% of its peak capacity. Another point is that the 100 GW quoted is likely dc, meaning it’s going to lose about 10% being converted to ac to be put onto the grid.

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toesy t1_j93aa1z wrote

I can make it easy for you.

100 GW 8 hours sunlight

So you’ve generated 800GWh out of a possible 2400 GWh

This would be 33% capacity

Given that you are only generating peak capacity for a limited amount of time and other factors like clouds you aren’t generating 100 GW for those 8 hours.

So a more realistic number is 600 GWh, meaning a 25% capacity factor.

This would be the equivalent of having a 25 GW base load asset running at 100% capacity factor

1

toesy t1_j93hye8 wrote

Electricity is needed 24 hours a day, 25 GW of solar is not providing 25 GW of continuous electricity to the grid for 24 hours.

Therefore 25 GW of solar puts the same amount of electrons to the grid as 6.25 GW of base load.

0

sault18 t1_j93rdpx wrote

Well if you count Supernova explosions scattering heavy elements into the universe, even then it's not renewable. You know some way of continuously making uranium 235? If you do, the nuclear physicists would really love to know it. But back in the reality that the rest of us live in, there is only a limited amount of fissile fuel on our planet.

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toesy t1_j93seje wrote

I’ve quantified my entire argument, you do nothing but say I’m wrong.

You’re like a pigeon on a chessboard, knocking pieces down and thinking they’ve won.

0

Tobias_Atwood t1_j950rlg wrote

It's even less renewable than coal and petroleum.

I mean yeah you let the earth sit for a few hundred million years you'll eventually get more carbon based fuels but if you want uranium you gotta blow up some god damned stars.

Do you have any idea how difficult that is?! It's pretty fucking difficult, genius.

3

Tobias_Atwood t1_j95172t wrote

You can think they're ugly all you want. If that's your only reason for not liking them you're still foolish.

You'll dislike the look of that land even more when human induced climate change sets it all on fire or drowns it in horrific floods.

3

Tobias_Atwood t1_j95heub wrote

I've driven by plenty of petroleum and coal related power plants and production facilities and I'd be so happy if they all got replaced by solar farms.

If your biggest problem with solar panels is the aesthetics you got serious issues the internet can't solve for you.

3

Yourbubblestink t1_j95sijh wrote

Not on top of the mountains. I get the energy lol behind the wind and solar movements, but I really don’t think we’ve spent enough time talking about the environmental impact. They are really ugly. Really ugly.

0

Tobias_Atwood t1_j95tdb6 wrote

We've been talking about the environmental impact for literal decades. Fossil fuels gotta go or we're all gonna die. Slowly. Horribly. Agonizingly. Stretched out over decades and centuries as the planet becomes a thick hot morass of death and decay.

Anyone who thinks otherwise is a fool or a liar. Possibly both.

You can think renewables are ugly all you want, but I don't care. I'll bury everything you ever look at in solar panels. From here on out until the day the sun fucking dies I hope the only thing you ever see again is solar panels.

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mymar101 t1_j97j5pg wrote

Only 100 more to go till time travel.

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Electrical-Bed8577 t1_j9o82e0 wrote

It isn't normally involved. It was noted as necessary due to decimation by infestation. Where there is a wind path you will typically see an opening of the trees. Check with your local forest service and politicians. Reports were filed. Please look into what is really happening to the forests due to climate change related infestation in North America. It's a viscious cycle. https://www.nature.org/en-us/newsroom/pests-pathogens-threats-forests-climate/

1