MONDAY 12 OCTOBER, 2009 |

Florida's New 90,000 Solar Panel Power Station

Florida Power & Light Company recently announced its DeSoto Next Generation Solar Energy Center in
Arcadia will begin generating electricity later this month.
The facility will (temporarily) grab the title of largest
solar
farm in the North America according to the company. The project represents
one of the largest private capital investments in the county and generated
around 400 jobs during the peak of construction.
The plant was constructed in under a year and uses over 90,000
solar
panels. Annual estimated electricity generation of the solar farm will be
approximately 42,000 megawatt hours or enough power to serve about 3,000 homes.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the DeSoto Next Generation Solar Energy Center will avoid the release of more than 575,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions into the
atmosphere over the life of the facility, which is equivalent to taking more than 4,500 cars off the road every
year.
Additionally, the electricity generated by the solar farm will reduce the use of fossil fuels in Florida by more than 277,000 barrels of oil and 7 billion cubic feet of natural gas.
The DeSoto facility is one of three new commercial-scale, solar power plants
Florida Power & Light Company
is constructing in Florida. Together, these will total 110 megawatts of capacity
by the end of 2010 and are could make Florida the second largest solar
power-producing state in the country.
FPL Vice President and Chief Development Officer Eric Silagy said the company is
positioned to build even more solar farms over the next two to three years if
the state's legislative and regulatory leaders continue to support solar energy.
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