Vistra Selects First Solar For *869 Megawatts* Of Solar Panels
Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!
Texas-based Vistra (NYSE: VST), an integrated retail electricity and power generation company, plans to build 6 utility-scale solar power plants across Texas. It will buy the solar modules for these power plants from Arizona-based First Solar (NASDAR:FSLR).
How many solar modules do you need for 6 utility-scale solar power plants? A lot. The solar modules will provide a whopping 869 megawatts (MW)DC of power capacity. Texas currently has a little more than 4,606 MW of solar power capacity installed — across all projects. Doing some quick math, 869 MW is 19% of that total!
Ironically, Arizona and Texas are both being considered swing states in the 2020 presidential election, and the matter of solar came up in last night’s presidential debate and led to some odd comments from incumbent Donald Trump. He said that “solar doesn’t quite have it yet.” It’s not quite clear what “it” was supposed to mean, but the implication was that solar is not a mature industry, is not really up for the job, and doesn’t offer much. Of course, this matches Trump’s longstanding attacks on renewable energy and huge preference for fossil fuels.
People working for Vistra and First Solar — as well as their friends and families and people working in supportive industries — know that solar very clearly does “have it.” Many of those people have full-time jobs in the solar industry.
Solar is actually the cheapest option for new electricity across the world now, as the traditionally fossil fuel–biased International Energy Agency just recently reported.