Massive Billion Dollar Solar Project Fails Before It’s Even Switched On. Yet Another Huge Waste Of Money By Greentards.

In 2011 the company Solar Reserve presented an ambitious project to build a gigantic photovoltaic power plant in the Nevada desert between Las Vegas and Reno. Ten thousand mirrors would be installed in a spiral around a giant tower using concentrated solar power (CSP), which would be stored in molten salt tanks for later use.

The project cost US$1 billion, which was provided by investors such as CityGroupin loans guaranteed by the US government. State authorities paved the way for the plant to be built on public land and in 2015 it was commissioned amid optimistic acclaim about the future of renewable energy.

However, almost a decade later, in April, the facility was shut down, leaving a photovoltaic wasteland that has cost major investors such as Warren Buffet and the state of Nevada hundreds of millions of dollars. The reason? By the time it opened, the plant’s technology was already outdated compared to much more efficient projects.

Nevada’s photovoltaic desert: Whose fault is this billion-dollar failure?

CSP technology, unlike the solar panels commonly used in photovoltaic plants such as the one Apple plans to install in Spain, consists of a series of mirrors that concentrate the sun’s heat in storage tanks with inorganic molten salts. They can store thermal energy at temperatures of between 290º and 565º.

This thermal energy is used to heat water and produce steam that drives a turbine that generates electricity. However, by 2015, much more efficient systems of this type already existed. This led to solar power generated at the Crescent Dunes photovoltaic desert costing about $135 per MWh, while other plants of the same type were selling their power for about $30 per MWh.

The costs of maintaining the facility and the salaries of the maintenance team eventually made the project unviable, and by last year it had lost its only customer, NV Energy, leading to the plant’s closure. Investors pulled out of the project and sued Solar Reserve for mismanagement of capital.

A complete and unmitigated failure. One of many – and it won’t be the last.

Yet stupid assholes like Clayton Tucker, Sandy Cortez, CommieLa Harris and other will continue to tell us this is “the future” of energy. The will continue to throw YOUR tax dollars at this garbage and raising your power bills.

RELATED: Two Princeton, MIT Scientists Say EPA Climate Regulations Based on a ‘Hoax’

New York to Pay $155 Per Megawatt Hour for Wind, Current Rate is $36 Per MWH

Climate “Scientist” Admits To Lying To Get Government Grants.

Finally – someone with the balls to admit what’s going on: you have thousands of otherwise-unemployable “scientists” floating around who need to make their mark and get funds. What better way than to tell the government what they want to hear.

Incredible story:

I Left Out the Full Truth to Get My Climate Change Paper Published

I just got published in Nature because I stuck to a narrative I knew the editors would like. That’s not the way science should work.

The entire article is HERE.

Multiply this by about 1,000 other scumbags all doing the same thing, and you end up with horrible policy like closing down nuke plants and replacing them with fucking PINWHEELS!!

One of my favorite excerpts:

It starts with the fact that a researcher’s career depends on his or her work being cited widely and perceived as important. This triggers the self-reinforcing feedback loops of name recognition, funding, quality applications from aspiring PhD students and postdocs, and of course, accolades. 

But as the number of researchers has skyrocketed in recent years—there are close to six times more PhDs earned in the U.S. each year than there were in the early 1960s—it has become more difficult than ever to stand out from the crowd. So while there has always been a tremendous premium placed on publishing in journals like Nature and Science, it’s also become extraordinarily more competitive.