Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tonopah settles for $200 millon

Solar energy plant cost $1 billion, has been offline since April 2019

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — The Department of Energy on Thursday announced a settlement to recover $200 million in taxpayer funds from Tonopah Solar Energy, a first-of-its-kind Nevada solar project that never showed a profit and frequently was offline.

The $1 billion Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Plant, which received $737 million in loan guarantees in 2011, has been offline since April 2019. The closure brought back memories of California solar panel manufactur­er Solyndra which received a $535 million federal loan guarantee in 2009 only to file for bankruptcy in 2011.

Department of Energy spokeswoma­n Shaylyn Hynes announced the deal with the company, which still must be approved by a bankruptcy court, as a win for taxpayers in a statement to the Review-journal.

“This project has consistent­ly faced technical failures that have proven difficult to overcome. The department’s decision was made after years of exhausting options within our authority to get the project back on track, given the significan­t taxpayer investment the prior administra­tion committed to this project,” Hynes said.

Under President Barack Obama,

the Department of Energy agreed to issue loan guarantees for the Nye County project in September 2011, shortly after Solyndra shuttered and filed for bankruptcy. Solyndra became a source of embarrassm­ent for a president who had visited the company’s Fremont plant in 2010 and declared, “The true engine of economic growth will always be companies like Solyndra.”

The Wall Street Journal editoriali­zed that Crescent Dunes was a “fiasco” that missed its start date, never met its electricit­y output projection­s and frequently was offline.

Bloomberg dubbed the $1 billion solar plant “obsolete before it ever went online” – given that advances in technology had made rival solar sources much cheaper to operate.

The design of the Crescent Dunes complex was unique. The plant used more than 10,000 mirrored heliostats, each with the square footage of a small house, to focus sunlight on a 640-foot-tall central tower and heat the molten salt inside to more than 1,000 degrees. The molten salt was then used to boil water, creating steam that drives generators to produce power day or night.

The 1,600-acre solar array built on public land over four years entered commercial operation in November 2015, with NV Energy as its sole customer.

The project had the bipartisan backing of then-senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and then-republican Gov. Jim Gibbons.

While Trump’s Energy Department supports renewable energy and has given $741 million to solar projects, a senior administra­tion official told the Review-journal that the $200 million settlement, if approved, “secures taxpayer money that was squandered by the previous administra­tion’s failed energy pet projects.”

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7391. Follow @Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter.

 ?? Pahrump Valley Times file ?? This 2015 file photo shows an aerial view of the Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Plant in Tonopah.
Pahrump Valley Times file This 2015 file photo shows an aerial view of the Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Plant in Tonopah.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States