Federal regulators may be close to granting final approval for a really, really big solar power project in California. We’re talking 1,000 megawatts (MW), here — enough generating capacity to power about 800,000 homes.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) on August 20 issued a final environmental impact statement (EIS) for the Blythe Solar Power Project, a proposed utility-scale solar installation that, if constructed, would be the largest solar energy plant in the world. In line with standard procedure, the EIS is open for public comment through September 18. The California Energy Commission has already recommended the plans be approved.
The Blythe project would make use of solar parabolic trough technology
Given the size of the proposed plant (its footprint would be about 6,000 acres) the Blythe project has “drawn relatively little environmental controversy,” according to the New York Times. The article suggests this may have to do with the fact that the area around Blythe has, in some ways, already been developed — mainly for agriculture. The same cannot be said of other regions, like the Mojave Desert, where plans for a solar energy installation were scaled back in February due to environmental impact concerns. More details, of course, are available in the EIS, which is available on the BLM’s website.
If all goes according to plan for the Blythe project, four phases of construction will be completed over the course of six years at total cost of about $6 billion. The project, the solar industry hopes, will demonstrate the viability of large-scale solar as a means to deliver emissions-free, competitively priced electricity.














