'Significant milestone' | US greenlights pair of Clearway solar giants in California desert
Department of Interior gives go-ahead to developer's 265MW Arica and 200MW Victory Pass PV projects on federal lands in south-eastern stretch of state
Each array will include up to 200MW of battery energy storage capacity and together, provide power for about 132,000 homes. DoI anticipates Clearway will invest $689m to build new project-related infrastructure.
San Francisco-based Clearway is the fifth largest owner of utility solar and wind capacity in the US. On 1 January, it had 5.5GW including 1.76GW of solar, according to industry advocacy body the American Clean Power Association.
The plan is a strategy that seeks to streamline approvals for renewables development while conserving unique desert ecosystems and providing recreational opportunities across 10.8 million acres (43.7 million ha) of public lands in the desert regions of seven California counties.
Those lands are a fraction of the state’s parched southeast that partly borders Arizona and Nevada, much of which is either off-limits as national parks or wilderness areas or owned by the Department of Defence. Tribes also own some lands.
DoI called final approvals for the projects a “significant milestone” toward permitting at least 25GW of new geothermal, solar, and wind on federal lands between fiscal years 2021 and 2025.
In fiscal year 2021, which runs from 1 October–30 September 2022, BLM has so far authorised or facilitated 14 projects totalling 3.36GW. Except for 100MW of geothermal, the balance was solar.