| San Isabel Solar Energy Center | |
|---|---|
A view of the project with theSpanish Peaks in the distance. | |
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| Country | United States |
| Location | Las Animas County, Colorado |
| Coordinates | 37°22′03″N104°28′04″W / 37.36750°N 104.46778°W /37.36750; -104.46778 |
| Status | Operational |
| Construction began | March 2016 |
| Commission date | December 2016 |
| Construction cost | US$60 million |
| Owner | PSEG Solar Source |
| Operators | juwi O&M Group |
| Solar farm | |
| Type | Flat-panel PV single-axis tracking |
| Site area | 250 acres (101 ha) |
| Power generation | |
| Nameplate capacity | 37.9 MWp, 30 MWAC |
| Capacity factor | 27.4(average 2017-2019) |
| Annual net output | 72.0 GW·h, 288 MW·h/acre |
TheSan Isabel Solar Energy Center is a 30 megawatt (MWAC)photovoltaic power station inLas Animas County, Colorado located about 20 miles north of the city ofTrinidad. The electricity is being sold toTri-State Generation and Transmission (aka Tri-State) under a 25-yearpower purchase agreement.[1][2][3] It is the second solar project, following theCimarron Solar Facility in year 2010, to be added to the utility cooperative'srenewables portfolio.[4]
The facility occupies about 250 acres ofsemi-aridshortgrass prairie on the Colorado south-easternplains, about 10 miles east of the base of theRocky Mountains.[1] It uses 120,960polycrystalline silicon panels (Model SN-72cell: rated 310 Wp, ~16% efficiency) that the manufacturer, S-Energy, claims are less susceptible topotential-induced degradation.[5][6] The panels are mounted in rows onto single-axistrackers to optimize electricity production throughout the day.[7]
The project was developed, constructed, and continues to be operated byBoulder-based juwi Inc., the U.S. subsidiary of the German renewable energy companyjuwi AG.[2][3][7] Construction began in March 2016 and employed about 400 workers, with Nesco serving as contractor for thecivil structures.[8] Commercial operation began in December 2016, with a dedication ceremony on July 14, 2017.[9] The project was financed, and is owned by PSEG Solar Source, a subsidiary of New Jersey'sPublic Service Enterprise Group. The completed facility cost about US$60 million.[1]
On January 11, 2019 Tri-State and juwi announced their development plan for the 100 MW Spanish Peaks Solar Project, which would be sited adjacent to San Isabel Solar Energy Center. Under their plan, juwi will continue to develop the project and Tri-State would buy the electricity under a 15-year contract. A construction start is being targeted for year 2022, with completion in 2023. If funded, it may be the fourth solar project, following the Alta Luna Solar Facility in 2017, to be added to Tri-State's renewables portfolio.[10][4]
| Year | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | 4,287 | 4,287 | |||||||||||
| 2017 | 2,678 | 4,172 | 5,837 | 6,443 | 7,596 | 8,232 | 7,140 | 5,975 | 5,005 | 5,927 | 3,781 | 3,882 | 66,668 |
| 2018 | 4,262 | 5,251 | 7,453 | 7,157 | 7,785 | 8,406 | 7,710 | 7,526 | 6,795 | 4,630 | 4,398 | 4,044 | 75,417 |
| 2019 | 4,326 | 5,451 | 6,380 | 6,596 | 7,396 | 7,830 | 8,006 | 7,685 | 7,433 | 5,556 | 3,940 | 3,452 | 74,051 |
| 2020 | 4,553 | 4,415 | 7,081 | 7,437 | 8,465 | 7,871 | 7,489 | 7,738 | |||||
| Average Annual Production (years 2017-2019) : | 72,045 | ||||||||||||
| AverageCapacity Factor (years 2017-2019) : | 27.4% | ||||||||||||