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Tim Sylvia, pv magazine

Tim Sylvia is an editorial intern at pv magazine USA. He is a senior communications major at Hood College in Frederick, Maryland. You can follow Tim on twitter @TSylviaMedia

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First Solar & Nel Hydrogen to develop integrated PV-hydrogen power plants

May 7, 2021 9:15:00 AM / by Tim Sylvia, pv magazine posted in Solar Energy, United States, Utility-Scale PV, Strategic Alliances, Hydrogen, Energy Transition, Green Hydrogen, World, Australia, Utility Scale Markets, Hydrogen Production, Hydrogen Economy

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First Solar

 

First Solar and Nel Hydrogen Electrolyser, a division of Nel ASA, a supplier of hydrogen technology, said they will develop integrated photovoltaic/hydrogen power plants.

First Solar and Nel will initially collaborate to develop an integrated power plant control and Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) system. The development of this network architecture is critical to enable optimisation of PV-electrolyser hybrid projects, resulting in low total cost of hydrogen and electricity. After that, the two will explore  ways of optimising and integrating technology throughout the solar and hydrogen production plant.

In statements, both companies stressed their desire to deliver the lowest total cost of solar to hydrogen possible. Both also noted that First Solar’s low-carbon production of its cadmium-telluride modules was significant for keeping emissions low.

Because the partnership is so recent in nature, no project timelines have been released as of yet.

 

This article originally appeared on pv-magazine-usa.com, and has been republished with permission by pv magazine (www.pv-magazine.com and www.pv-magazine-usa.com).

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FPL ‘green’ hydrogen pilot could herald a scale-up using solar and wind resources

Mar 16, 2021 9:30:00 AM / by Tim Sylvia, pv magazine posted in Policy, Energy Storage, Markets, Business, Installations, Solar Cost & Prices, Grids, Integration, Technology, Sustainability, Utility Scale Markets, Renewables, Procurement, Markets & Policy, Florida

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Image: Siemens

 

Within Florida Power & Light’s (FPL) recently-filed four-year rate request with the Florida Public Service Commission is a commitment to “investments to build a more sustainable energy future.”

The pledge in the regulatory filing includes the utility’s “30-by-30” plan to install 30 million solar panels in Florida by 2030, as well as plans to build what the utility said would be the world’s largest integrated solar-powered battery and a green hydrogen pilot project.

The battery system is the Manatee Energy Storage Center, a 409 MW behemoth that could begin serving customers in late 2021. FPL’s Gulf Power unit said on Feb. 25 that it had begun construction on the project. The project is expected to help speed the retirement of aging natural gas units at a nearby power plant.

The green hydrogen pilot project was first announced by NextEra Energy, FPL’s parent company, in July 2020.

NextEra plans to invest $65 million into the pilot, which will use power from otherwise curtailed solar energy to produce green hydrogen via a 20 MW electrolysis system.

It’s worth noting that NextEra ranks as one of the nation’s largest solar and wind developers. So, although a 20 MW pilot may not initially move the needle toot much, NextEra’s vast wind and solar also comes with a lot of curtailed renewable generation. If the pilot proves successful and scalable, the company could look toward a serious buildout of more hydrogen producing facilities that could replace fossil fuels.

For now, the green hydrogen produced as part of the pilot would replace some of the natural gas combusted at FPL’s 1.75 GW Okeechobee power plant. Rather than build a new hydrogen plant, FPL is retrofitting an existing plant to accommodate the fuel source.

 

This article originally appeared on pv-magazine-usa.com, and has been republished with permission by pv magazine (www.pv-magazine.com and www.pv-magazine-usa.com).

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