US DOI approves plans for Californian 700MW solar-plus-storage project Email
The Crimson Solar project is expected to be able to power 87,500 homes on completion. Image: DOI/Tom Brewster.
The US Department of the Interior (DOI) has announced that the development of a 700MW capacity solar-plus-storage project on Californian federal land has been approved.
The DOI said on Monday (3 May) that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has given final approval to the Crimson Solar Project, a 350MW solar PV array with a 350MW/1,400MWh energy storage system that will generate power through the Southern California Edison Colorado River Substation.
The project will be owned by renewables company Sonoran West Solar Holdings, a subsidiary of utility-scale developer Recurrent Energy and Canadian Solar. It will be built on 2,500 acres of Federal land in Riverside County, according to an impact statement, and is expected to require an investment of US$500 million. The DOI said in
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Tom Brewster was born in St. Genevieve County, Missouri in 1947, the fifth of ten children. Served in the US Army in the mid 1960s. After discharge, at the age of 24, joined the Lincoln Illinois Police Department. Later served as the Logan County State’s Attorney’s Office Investigator and Chief of Police of Mason City, Illinois. During that time frame, tested and acquired an Illinois Private Detective license which still operates under the name of Brewster Investigations. An inclination to put words to paper, a fair amount of law enforcement experience and always active imagination were substantive to “The Road to Floradixie,” his newest novel released by Beacon Publishing Group.