TotalEnergies starts up utility-scale solar power plant

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TotalEnergies has started commercial operations of Myrtle Solar, its largest-to-date utility-scale operated solar farm in the United States, reported Energy-Pedia.com. Located south of Houston, Myrtle has a capacity of 380 megawatts peak (MWp) of solar production and 225 MWh of co-located batteries. 

With 705,000 ground-mounted photovoltaic panels installed over an area equivalent to 1,800 American football fields, Myrtle produces enough green electricity to cover the equivalent consumption of 70,000 homes.

Approximately 70% of Myrtle’s capacity will reportedly supply green electricity to the company’s industrial plants in the U.S. Gulf Coast region as part of the company’s “Go Green Project,” which should enable the company to cover, by 2025, the power needs and curtail the Scope 1 plus 2 emissions of its industrial sites in Port Arthur and La Porte in Texas, and Carville in Louisiana.

The remaining 30% of Myrtle’s capacity will supply green electricity to Kilroy Realty, a publicly traded real estate company, under a 15-year corporate power purchase agreement (CPPA) indexed on merchant prices, the company reports.

In addition to the photovoltaic installations, the solar power plant also features battery energy storage equipment to meet the need for grid stabilization. With a total capacity of 225 MWh, this storage is made of 114 high-tech Energy Storage Systems (ESS) containers designed and assembled by TotalEnergies’ affiliate, Saft, which develops industrial batteries.

The Myrtle project, which benefits from the IRA (Inflation Reduction Act) Tax Credit mechanisms, will positively contribute to TotalEnergies’ Integrated Power’s profitability target of 12%.

“This startup is another milestone in achieving our goal to build an integrated and profitable position in Texas, where ERCOT is the main electrical grid operator. Besides, the project will enable the company to cover the power needs of some of its biggest U.S. industrial sites with electricity from a renewable source,” said Vincent Stoquart, senior vice president of Renewables at TotalEnergies. “Given the advantages that IRA tax exemptions are generating, we will continue to actively develop our 25 GW portfolio of projects in operation or development in the United States, to contribute to the company’s global power generation target of more than 100 TWh by 2030.”