Pilots complain of brightness from huge solar farm

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RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP) — Pilots flying over the world’s
largest solar power plant in the Mojave Desert have complained of nearly
blinding glare from the sun’s reflection off its vast array of mirrors.
Two
anonymous complaints were filed with the federal government in August,
months before the Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System formally
opened across roughly 5 square miles of federal land near the
California-Nevada border, the Riverside Press-Enterprise reported Friday
(http://bit.ly/1gomgrN ).
A
pilot wrote that it was impossible to look in the direction of the plant
because of the intense brightness from the hundreds of thousands of
mirrors. An air traffic controller reported receiving daily complaints
about the brightness from pilots flying over the solar farm during the
late morning and early afternoon.
Dozens of daily flights between Southern California and Las Vegas cross the area above or near the solar
farm.
"I
have no idea what can be done about this situation, but being a
passenger on an aircraft that flew through this airspace and saw it for
myself, I would say that something needs to be done. It is extremely
bright and distracting," the controller wrote.
NRG Energy Inc., a
co-owner and operator of the plant, was investigating the issue and will
respond within 10 days, company spokesman Jeff Holland said Friday.
He
said developer BrightSource Energy was testing and calibrating the
mirror assemblies, called heliostats, in August but it is unknown if
that had anything to do with the reflection.
Using technology
known as solar thermal, the computer-controlled mirrors roughly the size
of a garage door track sunlight and reflect it onto boilers atop
459-foot towers. The sun’s power is used to heat water in the boilers’
tubes and make steam, which drives turbines to create electricity.
The
risks of intense reflection from the solar arrays on aircraft and
drivers on busy Interstate 15 were evaluated in the project’s
environmental study. Pilots flying within 3,300 feet of the heliostats
could experience temporary blindness and compromise safety, the study
found.
To prevent possible problems, BrightSource was required to
develop a heliostat positioning plan within 90 days of beginning
operation to avoid potential hazards and to monitor brightness.
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