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Andasol

Andasol Solar Power Station
12-05-08 AS1.JPG
Andasol Solar Power Station
Andasol Solar Power Station is located in Spain
Andasol Solar Power Station
Location of Andasol Solar Power Station within Spain
Country Spain
Location near Guadix, Granada
Coordinates 37°13′42.70″N 3°4′6.73″W / 37.2285278°N 3.0685361°W / 37.2285278; -3.0685361Coordinates: 37°13′42.70″N 3°4′6.73″W / 37.2285278°N 3.0685361°W / 37.2285278; -3.0685361
Status Operational
Commission date 2009
Owner(s) ACS Group (Andasol 1&2)
Stadtwerke München
MAN Ferrostaal
Innogy
Solar field
Type CSP
CSP technology Parabolic trough
Site area 600 hectares (1,483 acres)
Site resource 2,136 kWh/m2/yr
Power generation
Nameplate capacity 150 MW
Capacity factor 0.41
Storage capacity 7.5 hours
Average generation 495 GWh

The Andasol solar power station is a 150-megawatt (MW) concentrated solar power station and Europe's first commercial plant to use parabolic troughs. It is located near Guadix in Andalusia, Spain, and its name is a portmanteau of Andalusia and Sol (Sun in Spanish). The Andasol plant uses tanks of molten salt as thermal energy storage to continue generating electricity, irrespective of whether the sun is shining or not.

Andasol is the first parabolic trough power plant in Europe, and Andasol 1 went online in March 2009. Because of the high altitude (1,100 m) and the semi-arid climate, the site has exceptionally high annual direct insolation of 2,200 kWh/m² per year. Each plant has a gross electricity output of 50 megawatts (MWe), producing around 165 gigawatt-hours (GW·h) per year. The collectors installed have a combined surface area of 51 hectares (equal to 70 soccer fields); it occupies about 200 ha of land.

Andasol has a thermal storage system which absorbs part of the heat produced in the solar field during the day. This heat is then stored in a molten salt mixture of 60% sodium nitrate and 40% potassium nitrate. This process almost doubles the number of operational hours at the solar thermal power plant per year. A fully loaded storage system holds 1,010 MW·h of heat, enough to run the turbine and produce electricity for about 7.5 hours at full-load, in case of overcast skies or after sunset. The heat reservoirs each consist of two tanks measuring 14 m in height and 36 m in diameter and containing molten salt. Andasol 1 is able to supply environmentally friendly solar electricity for up to 200,000 people.

Andasol consists of 3 projects: Andasol-1 (completed 2008), Andasol-2 (completed 2009) and Andasol-3 (completed 2011). Each project generates approximately 165 GW-h each per year (a total of 495 GW-h for all three combined). The total cost of building the three projects was estimated to €900 million.


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