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California to shutdown $2.2 billion solar plant that never lived up to its promises

Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:03 pm
Posted by Darth_Vader
A galaxy far, far away
Member since Dec 2011
71811 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:03 pm
quote:

Seen from the sky, the Ivanpah Solar Power Facility in California’s Mojave Desert resembles a futuristic dream.

Viewed from the bottom line, however, Ivanpah is anything but.

The solar power plant, which features three 459-foot towers and thousands of computer-controlled mirrors known as heliostats, cost some $2.2 billion to build.

Construction began in 2010 and was completed in 2014. Now it’s set to close in 2026 after failing to efficiently generate solar energy.

In 2011, the US Department of Energy under President Barack Obama issued $1.6 billion in three federal loan guarantees for the project and the secretary of energy, Ernest Moniz, hailed it as “an example of how America is becoming a world leader in solar energy.”


quote:

When Ivanpah began operating in 2014, it ranked as the world’s largest solar plant. It seemed like a viable solution to California’s renewable energy goals of employing affordable and efficient technology to reduce the need for fossil fuels.

NY Post


Who could have ever predicted this?
Posted by TigerintheNO
New Orleans
Member since Jan 2004
43981 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:16 pm to
According to the Association of Avian Veterinarians, the power plant “is believed to be responsible for at least 6,000 bird deaths each year.”
Posted by billjamin
Houston
Member since Jun 2019
16329 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:17 pm to
I wonder if this one’s shorter or longer than the poliboard one. Place your bets.
Posted by Darth_Vader
A galaxy far, far away
Member since Dec 2011
71811 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:18 pm to
quote:

According to the Association of Avian Veterinarians, the power plant “is believed to be responsible for at least 6,000 bird deaths each year.”


Yeah, if they flew too close, they’d get fried. Windmills kill a lot of birds yearly as well.

This post was edited on 9/24/25 at 7:19 pm
Posted by Jimmyboy
Member since May 2025
1763 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:21 pm to
Posted by dj30
New Orleans
Member since Feb 2006
29855 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:21 pm to
I was actually one of the lead engineers on this project. Seems like so long ago.
Posted by HeadSlash
TEAM LIVE BADASS - St. GEORGE
Member since Aug 2006
54639 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:25 pm to
quote:

Who could have ever predicted this?


:raiseshand:
Posted by cadillac7563
Birmingham, AL
Member since Aug 2014
1957 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:26 pm to
If only we had something from the earth that provided exponentially more clean power generation
Posted by csorre1
Member since Apr 2010
7003 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:31 pm to
quote:

“is believed to be responsible for at least 6,000 bird deaths each year.”


I never understood this argument. Cats kill 1-4 billion birds per year. Glass windows kill another 500 million birds per year.

There are plenty of negatives to solar and wind farms that have more merit than the bird thing.
Posted by billjamin
Houston
Member since Jun 2019
16329 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:32 pm to
quote:

If only we had something from the earth that provided exponentially more clean power generation

Kind of hard to beat the 44 quadrillion watts the earth gets blasted with every day from the sun.
This post was edited on 9/24/25 at 7:44 pm
Posted by Crow Pie
Neuro ICU - Tulane Med Center
Member since Feb 2010
27107 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:33 pm to
quote:

t “never lived up to its promises, producing less electricity than expected, while relying on natural gas to stay operational.”


A solar plant that was powered by LNG.

They used green diesel to run the generator to get the LNG.

The green diesel plant was powered by coal generated electricity.

Very logical.
Posted by Joshjrn
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2008
31400 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:33 pm to
quote:

Who could have ever predicted this?

There's always risk involved with spending a shite ton of money on a project that's at the cutting edge of a particular tech. This project, while an interesting idea, ended up getting quickly passed up by other forms of solar energy tech, so it foundered.

It also cooked birds mid air, which made it rather unpopular
Posted by Lou
Modesto, CA
Member since Aug 2005
8609 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:34 pm to
quote:

Who could have ever predicted this?


Benjamin Zycher with the American Enterprise Institute back in 2014:

California’s New Solar Plant: Burning Up Taxpayer Money, Land, and Wildlife


This post was edited on 9/24/25 at 8:12 pm
Posted by Chucktown_Badger
The banks of the Ashley River
Member since May 2013
35734 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:35 pm to
quote:

Cats kill 1-4 billion birds per year. Glass windows kill another 500 million birds per year.


Cats and glass windows are kind of part of our lives. It’s suggesting that aside from being a boondoggle these things also destroy nature and wildlife unnecessarily.

I’m also curious of the source of that 500,000,000 per year number. That seems exorbitantly high.
Posted by Joshjrn
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2008
31400 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:36 pm to
quote:

I never understood this argument. Cats kill 1-4 billion birds per year. Glass windows kill another 500 million birds per year.

There are plenty of negatives to solar and wind farms that have more merit than the bird thing.

It's that it did it really violently and it caught people's attention.

For those who aren't aware, this tech wasn't even kind of related to current solar panels. Honestly, it has more in common with how a nuclear power plant works than anything else. Basically, a shite ton of mirrors reflected sunlight at a giant reservoir that boiled water, turning turbines with the steam. When you reflect a shite ton of concentrated solar energy towards a single point, you will cause anything that moves into that path to burst into flames, rather spectacularly.

People didn't like that
Posted by Chucktown_Badger
The banks of the Ashley River
Member since May 2013
35734 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:37 pm to
quote:

A solar plant that was powered by LNG.


525 million cubic feet per year and 50,000 tons of greenhouse gases per year. They had to get approval to burn that much natural gas because the plant was producing so little energy.

This is about the most California thing ever. Thanks Obama!
Posted by csorre1
Member since Apr 2010
7003 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:40 pm to
quote:

I’m also curious of the source of that 500,000,000 per year number. That seems exorbitantly high.


The two most credible are the Audubon Institute and the American Bird Conservancy.

I agree with your point about them wrecking nature. I just think the footprint of these sites, the duck curve, putting them on what would otherwise be farm land, the difficulty of recycling the PV panels and turbine blades, etc are all better arguments.
This post was edited on 9/24/25 at 7:42 pm
Posted by Harry Morgan
Member since Sep 2019
10340 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:42 pm to
Posted by Chucktown_Badger
The banks of the Ashley River
Member since May 2013
35734 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:43 pm to
quote:

People didn't like that


But that phenomenon was not a surprise.

I feel like so many liberal ideas are like the McBain quote from the Simpsons:

“I’m going to save you if I have to kill every last one of you!”
Posted by Zappas Stache
Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Member since Apr 2009
42252 posts
Posted on 9/24/25 at 7:44 pm to
It's an older solar farm that can't compete with newer solar panels being used by newer solar farms which are more efficient. It's likely the property will eventually be a solar farm again with new technology being used. Meanwhile PG&E will buy more power from the newer solar farms resulting in cheaper prices for users.
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