October
28, 2007
Editorial:
Growing a solar industry
With
its land holdings and success so far, Boulder City is primed for growth in
solar field
Nevada
Solar One, the world's third-largest solar power plant, leases land in the
Eldorado Valley from Boulder City. The revenue helps shore up the budget in
this city of about 16,000 people.
The
plant, which opened in June, also adds 64 megawatts of electricity to the power
grid. That's enough to power 40,000 homes, yet the output is small compared to
that of coal-fired plants that generate between 800 and 1,500 megawatts.
When
was the last time you heard about solar plants drawing protests?
Here
in the West, coal plants are drawing increasing criticism, and not just from
environmentalists. The Oct. 20 edition of The New York Times carried a lengthy
story about a growing anti-coal sentiment among ranchers and farmers in Montana
and Idaho.
The
story pointed out that such sentiment "is a rising phenomenon in the
West." The fear among those who work the land is that global warming is
behind the drought threatening their way of life. Scientists say much of the
cause of global warming can be traced to emissions from coal-fired power
plants.
The
Times also noted the recent rejection of a coal-fired plant by the Kansas
Department of Health and Environment - on the sole grounds that it would
contribute to global warming. Here in Nevada, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
is strenuously opposing plans for three coal-fired plants (although Gov. Jim
Gibbons, of course, supports them).
All
of which gets us back to Boulder City and the solar plant that sits on just 350
of the 107,000 acres the city owns in the open and sunny Eldorado Valley.
Nevada
Solar One, owned by Acciona Group , based in Madrid, Spain, would not have
gotten off the ground without support from the federal and state governments.
We
hope to see more of that kind of support so that one day a fair portion Boulder
City's vast land holdings could serve as an international center for solar
energy production and research.
The
city already has at least one more solar proposal on the table, from a Swiss
company that wants to lease six acres to build a 1 megawatt plant to
demonstrate new technology.
While all proposals should be carefully scrutinized, our sense is that with anti-coal groups gaining momentum, the timing could not be better for a growing solar industry on the outskirts of Boulder City.