Under a deal signed Thursday with a San Francisco-based renewable energy developer, officials with Sonoma Clean Power, now the default electricity provider in Sonoma County, unveiled a plan to install a 12.5-megawatt solar farm on floating docks atop holding ponds operated by the county Water Agency.
When completed in 2016, the project, which will provide enough electricity to power 3,000 homes, will be the largest solar installation in the county.
It also will help fulfill one of Sonoma Clean Power’s central goals — to develop local sources of renewable energy for its expanding customer base, now taking in more than 160,000 residential and commercial accounts across five cities in the county.
Before its launch last May, and through its first nine months of operation, the public venture faced pointed questions as to how quickly it would be able to spearhead local energy projects given constraints on rural land use and the comparatively higher price of power from smaller systems versus large, far-flung industrial sources.
Sonoma Clean Power officials said the planned solar installation served as a key early benchmark of progress in the agency’s rollout.
“To be doing it this early is just exciting,” said Sonoma Clean Power CEO Geof Syphers.
Pristine Sun, the solar farm developer, will build the project on six Water Agency ponds — four in the Sonoma Valley and two just north of Santa Rosa.
The new technology, which is gaining popularity in Japan where real estate is at a premium, allows for large solar installations on man-made reservoirs, preserving land for agriculture, open space or other uses.
The purchase deal with Sonoma Clean Power will allow Pristine Sun to finance and build the project. Syphers declined to give the power purchase price, but he said that it is comparable to a contract the agency has for 70 megawatts of solar power from a development in the Central Valley. Pristine Sun is leasing the ponds from the Water Agency for about $30,000 per year.
The deal comes after the Water Agency last year studied using its recycled wastewater ponds to host the floating solar panels. Cordel Stillman, deputy chief engineer at the Water Agency, said the project meets the agency’s environmental goals by encouraging renewable energy, and it allows the agency to get a secondary use out of the ponds.
The project will represent 15 percent of all the existing solar energy development in Sonoma County and will be more than six times the size of the next-largest project, a 1.8-megawatt solar farm on a former landfill in Cloverdale. The Dry Creek Band of Pomo Indians in November announced plans for a 5 megawatt solar plant near Lake Sonoma.
The Water Agency has its own solar installations and will not use power generated from the project, Stillman said. A side benefit from covering the two ponds just north of the Charles M. Schulz-Sonoma County Airport with panels is that it will reduce the number of ducks and other water fowl that congregate around the airport — a priority for federal aviation regulators, Stillman said.
Finding sites for large renewable projects is a key challenge going forward for Sonoma Clean Power given the county’s strong protections for open space and agricultural land. Stillman, who led the Water Agency’s effort to form Sonoma Clean Power, said the venture had to get creative.
“We know it’s hard to get big solar projects in Sonoma County. You get pushbacks on aesthetics and the taking of agricultural land,” Stillman said. “We took a look and said ‘Where else can we put solar?’?”
A Pristine Sun representative did not return a call seeking comment. According to its website, the company has done more than $2 billion in solar and wind projects in 20 states.
Syphers said that the company was selected from among four solar developers. The company hires locally and pays a prevailing wage, he said. Because of the unique technology, Syphers said the contract ensures that the developer, not the ratepayers, bears the risk if the project cannot be delivered.
Sonoma Clean Power operates as the default power provider for most of the electricity customers in the county. Petaluma, Rohnert Park and Cloverdale are set to receive service, beginning in the summer. Healdsburg has its own utility and does not participate. Customers have the ability to opt out and switch back to PG&E, which still delivers the power and maintains the grid.
Mark Landman, board chairman for Sonoma Clean Power, said the agency is exploring other sites for floating solar projects.
“We’re trailblazers in this area,” he said. “This is an environmental benefit that is saving people money. We have the courage in this county to do something slightly outside of the box.”
©2015 The Press Democrat (Santa Rosa, Calif.) Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC