Power tower solar has been under a cloud — in the U.S., anyway —
after 321 birds or bats were killed in the first 6 months of operation
by flying through solar flux above the Ivanpah Concentrated Solar Power
(CSP) plant, the Google-funded colossus in California’s Mojave desert. Opponents then greatly exaggerated the numbers, making it a challenge for California regulators to maintain a level-headed approach to permitting future power tower projects.
Regulators do have access to the actual facts
as an independent tally and mortality estimate algorithms are typically
required for permitting renewable energy. But battling public opinion,
even if misinformed, takes courage. Now there is good news coming from SolarReserve. It has
been testing the standby procedures at the Crescent Dunes Solar Project,
a 110-megawatt (MW) power tower CSP plant located in the Nevada desert
near the town of Tonopah.
Power Tower: Bird Deaths Zero
The first power tower with storage in the U.S. seems to
have solved the problem of avian mortality altogether. However, Crescent
Dunes initially experienced the same issues as Ivanpah, but just for
one day until plant operators cracked the code.
For four or five hours on one day in January, the team
focused 3,000 mirrors on one tight donut of air space above the tower
for several hours in standby mode, and a reported 115 birds were
killed. When the mirrors are in standby mode — not aimed at the
tower receiver to make power — they are just aimed at a point in the
sky. Standby is the high risk position for birds. There is a right way
and, now they know, a wrong way to aim them during standby. "As soon as we realized this, we halted testing," CEO
Kevin Smith told me this week. "And our engineering team came up with a
correction within a day or two."
No More than Four Suns Anywhere
The solution the SolarReserve engineers devised was to
extend multiple standby points out across a huge "pancake" area hundreds
of meters from the tower "so that no single point in the sky has a
concentration of more than four suns.” "We’ve seen birds fly in and out of the standby positioning and there's no harm at all," Smith said. As of mid-April, SolarReserve had zero bird deaths for
three months since that mid-January day when they discovered the problem
and how to solve it.
Solar flux, or concentrated sunlight that is a measurement
of light energy radiated in a given area, is not heat. It’s effects
matter only when light energy is absorbed by an object that it hits,
which during operation is the receiver at the top of the tower. Birds
recognize the receiver and the tower as a solid object, so they are
unlikely to fly into it.
Only when multiple reflections are not focused on the
tower but instead focused in a concentrated area of clear space, there
is a risk that birds will fly through that space. However, by focusing no more than four suns at any one standby point in the sky, the level of solar flux is safer for birds. “Birds can fly in and out of this zone without injury," said Smith. Of course, birds can and do fly into most manmade
structures — cell phone towers, houses, skyscrapers, industrial
buildings, and coal plants and natural gas plants — so the risk of
flying into the tower itself can’t be eliminated.
When Heliostats Are Put in Standby
Like computers, the heliostats are asleep at night — just
laying flat to avoid wind. Each sunrise, they are woken up and pointed
"to a place where we know their exact location" so that when aimed at
the receiver for the day, they are traveling from a known position.
However, unlike Ivanpah, during normal operation at
Crescent Dunes the heliostats do not need to go into standby after the
initial standby position at sunrise due to energy storage. "In normal operation the mirrors go into standby position
in the morning and they are only there for few minutes, after which they
are in operation mode and pointed on the receiver all day long," Smith
explained. "During testing, we actually have the mirrors in standby for
several hours. Even though in normal operation, they’re in standby only
for a few minutes at daybreak."
torage Removes Need for Standby
With storage, the mirrors remain focused on the receiver
all day because it is beneficial to keep heating the molten salts. Each
cycling through the receiver adds more heat to the molten salts and all
excess heat is stored. So moving mirrors to standby during the day would
actually reduce its selling point — the dispatchability supplied by
storage. So, because it has storage, Crescent Dunes doesn’t need to go
into and out of standby during normal operation.
Ivanpah’s design is different. It does not have storage,
and it does need to go into standby during the day to protect the
turbine power block, which is run on steam by directly boiling water in
the receiver with the sun’s energy. If clouds pass, steam can cool to
create partial water droplets in the system, which would damage the
turbine that generates the electricity. To prevent this, the steam
turbine is switched off and the mirrors are put in standby during those
lower solar periods throughout the day.
Ivanpah owners have now also developed a similar algorithm
specific to their system to reduce standby solar flux, and they also
use bird, bat and insect deterrents under the oversight of the California Energy Commission.
But the SolarReserve answer to reduce the risks to birds
now provides another option to provide clean, safe and reliable energy,
which with storage provides solar power even after the sun goes down. Solar tower developers have been working together to solve
this issue once and for all, and SolarReserve’s 4 sun standby solution
has been made available to be used by other power tower developers.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2015/04/solar-flux-solution-brightens-future-of-concentrated-solar-power
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