First Solar buys share of California projects


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First Solar Utility-Scale Projects expand on private land in California and the Southwest, leveraging thin-film photovoltaic modules, EPC services, and streamlined permitting to mitigate environmental lawsuit delays and boost renewable energy capacity.

 

The Big Picture

Privately sited CA and Southwest plants using thin-film modules, with First Solar managing EPC, development, permitting.

  • Built on private land to avoid public lands delays
  • Utility-scale capacity in CA and the Southwest
  • Thin-film PV modules secure demand for manufacturing

 

Tempe-based First Solar said it has acquired a portion of solar development projects from Edison Mission Group, a unit of Edison International and sister company of Southern California Edison.

 

The large-scale solar power plants, which are scheduled to be built over the next few years, including its largest PV installation in North America due to break ground, will be located on privately owned land in California and the Southwest, the company said.

The location on private land is important because many solar projects on public lands in California have been delayed by environmental lawsuits. However, the electricity output from the Edison Mission projects is not yet contracted with utilities, unlike a PG&E contract the company has secured on other projects, the company said.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The acquisition continues First Solar’s move into large utility-scale solar energy projects, such as its 550 MW California project announced recently. The company is already one of the world’s largest makers of thin-film photovoltaic modules, which produce electricity when exposed to sunlight.

The new solar power plant construction will provide a predictable source of demand for the company’s modules, said Lisa Bodensteiner, First Solar’s vice president of North American business development.

First Solar and EMG have worked together since 2008 on the EMG projects, with First Solar providing engineering, procurement and construction services while EMG was responsible for land acquisition and permitting. Now First Solar said it will handle all development activities for these projects, including permitting, as more California PV plants come online.

First Solar completed construction of its first California utility-scale solar power plant in December, the 21-megawatt Blythe project power facility, which was sold to NRG Energy and supplies electricity to Southern California Edison. The Blythe plant is being operated by First Solar under a long-term contract with NRG.

 

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