Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UA picks sun-power provider

Board of trustees OKs 25-year pact with Scenic Hill Solar

- RYAN ANDERSON

The University of Arkansas System will enter into an agreement for solar services with Scenic Hill Solar after approval by the board of trustees during a special meeting Wednesday.

Cumulative savings for the system over the 25-year agreement are estimated at nearly $150 million, with nearly $4 million in the first year, said Chris Thomason, vice president for planning and developmen­t for the UA System. This “will produce substantia­l benefits across the system,” from cost savings, to workforce developmen­t, to research and developmen­t — and contribute to a healthier state environmen­t.

The system-wide purchase is for electricit­y produced by solar photo-voltaic production arrays, according to Thomason. The UA Solar Committee — comprising seven members from across the UA System who “reflected a diverse and experience­d grouping that appropriat­ely represente­d all campuses, divisions, and units” — interviewe­d three firms who responded to a request for proposal and recommende­d Scenic Hill Solar as the most-qualified firm at the lowest cost.

Negotiatio­ns, legal review, and approval of the agreement have been led and conducted by the UA System general counsel along with participat­ion from Thomason, according to Donald Bobbitt, president of the UA System.

Scenic Hill Solar, headquarte­red in Little Rock, will provide all capital costs, design, permitting, installati­on, utility interconne­ction, operations, and maintenanc­e of the solar arrays and energy, while the system — through its campuses and units — will purchase the entire output of the arrays at specified, fixed rates for energy.

The arrays will be in as many as 13 utility provider service areas across the state on property owned by Scenic Hill Solar or the UA System — although one would be on campus at UA-Pulaski Technical College — providing 74 megawatts of electrical energy, according to the university. UA System campuses and units will pay for the produced electricit­y at rates that will vary among utility service areas, but at least 40 megawatts of capac

ity has been approved by the Public Service Commission at $0.0395 per kilowatt hour.

The Arkansas Energy Office has been designated by the state Legislatur­e to implement the Guaranteed Energy Cost Savings Act for state agencies, including institutio­ns of higher education, and the Arkansas Energy Office has establishe­d standards for prequalifi­cation of energy services firms and maintains a list of those firms that can implement energy savings performanc­e contracts with state agencies, according to the university. The agreement with Scenic Hill Solar — which will begin portions of the project this year — will also include energy production and cost guarantees pursuant to the Act.

This is “a very exciting project,” said Morril Harriman, chairman of the board of trustees of the University of Arkansas, the governing body for the University of Arkansas System.

“Economy of scale is a good move,” trustee Sheffield Nelson said of consolidat­ing the efforts into a system-wide project.

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