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Solar Panels Generating Power for Pyramid Lake Tribal Health Clinic A new solar energy system is providing about half of the electricity needed to power the Pyramid Lake Tribal Health Clinic in Nixon. The 30-kilowatt photovoltaic array was made possible by a combination of donated labor and materials, and a program created by the Nevada State Legislature to encourage Nevadans to use renewable energy, which is managed statewide by NV Energy.
The panels were installed on the ground in a fenced area next to the clinic and are expected to generate approximately 60,000 kilowatt hours of electricity per year, or roughly half the clinic’s annual electricity consumption. This will reduce the clinic’s annual electric bill by approximately $7,200--or $180,000 over the expected 25-year life of the panels, said John Hargrove, project manager for SolarGenerations.
Since the start of the program six years ago, over 2 megawatts of solar energy have been installed statewide, and over $8 million in financial incentives have been paid out.
The Tribal Health Clinic provides health care services to the communities of the Pyramid Lake Paiute Reservation.
Black Rock Solar is supported by Burning Man and is focused on speeding the adoption of renewable energy by delivering low or no cost solar power to communities in need. Employing an innovative and collaborative approach to solar project development, Black Rock Solar extends Burning Man’s spirit of creativity and environmental stewardship to affect real environmental change, according to Tom Price, executive director of Black Rock Solar. This is the seventh completed project for Black Rock Solar, Price said. The group has installed solar panels at Natchez Elementary School in Wadsworth; the elementary, middle and high schools in Gerlach; Pershing County General Hospital in Lovelock, the UNR Joe Crowley Student Union, the new Nevada Discovery Museum in Reno, and the Reno Seventh Day Adventist Church. |
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Copyright © 2009. Reuse of this publication or its contents is allowed with credit to Western Energy Institute. |
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