Is California hedging its bets on an old solar warhorse, or is it protecting a crucial part of California’s renewable framework? That’s the reasoning process following the California Public Utilities ...
For the last decade, drivers on Interstate 15 heading through the Mojave Desert between Los Angeles and Las Vegas have passed by the massive Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System. Located just ...
The Ivanpah solar power facility is stuck in the middle of an energy policy tug-of-war between state and federal officials.
California regulators reject plans to shut down the Ivanpah Solar Project along Interstate 15 at the Nevada border. The solar plant, once seen as a model for the future, is now viewed as a $2.2 ...
The partially taxpayer-funded Ivanpah Solar Power Facility in California’s Mojave Desert is set to shut down in 2026 due to inefficiency in generating solar energy, according to the New York Post.
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, ...
Built in two phases, the Eland project comprises 758MW of solar PV and 300MW/1.2GWh of BESS. Image: Arevon. Independent power producer (IPP) Arevon Energy has powered the second phase of the Eland ...
For years, California lawmakers were stymied. But now, at a crucial juncture for electricity in America, the state is embracing an ambitious and long-awaited plan: to buy and sell far, far more power ...
Headlines have been circulating major news outlets around the impending closure of the Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, a $2.2 billion project that began construction in 2010 and has been providing ...
Surplus manufacturing equipment from solar shingle producer GAF Energy is up for auction after the company announced it would ...
California might generate as much energy from wind and sun as it uses overall, but not when it’s needed. To keep the power flowing, the state will actually need up to 80 gigawatts of gas-fired backup ...
The partially taxpayer-funded Ivanpah Solar Power Facility in California’s Mojave Desert is set to shut down in 2026 due to inefficiency in generating solar energy, according to the New York Post.