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February 4, 2010
Beltsville,
MD, USA: SunEdison Activates First Phase of 16MW North Carolina
Solar Farm
SunEdison
has activated the first phase of its 16-megawatt solar farm in
Davidson County, N.C. The first phase of the project represents
4 megawatts of generation capacity and is comprised of more than
14,000 solar panels that will generate over 6 million kilowatt
hours of electricity in the first year of operation. Duke Energy
is buying the farm’s entire output under a 20-year contract.
SunEdison
4MW Solar Farm- Davidson County, N.C
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Over
those 20 years, the farm will generate 115 million kilowatt hours
of electricity – enough to power 10,000 average homes for one
year. It also will offset more than 225 million pounds of carbon
dioxide that otherwise would have been emitted from a traditional
coal-burning power plant.
“This
first phase represents a major milestone in our overall plan to
develop 16 megawatts of solar energy at this site,” said SunEdison
President Carlos Domenech. “Having financed and completed this
initial installation, we have mobilized resources for the next
phase of the solar farm.”
The
farm is one of several North American utility-scale power plants
that SunEdison has financed and developed, and now operates.
Further details about: SunEdison
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