China's first solar thermal power plant began soliciting tenders on Wednesday as the country's efforts to diversify its clean energy sources gathered pace.
The 50 megawatt solar thermal power plant will rise on uninhabited land of more than 100 hectares in Hangjinqi in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The tenders are scheduled to be opened on Jan. 20, 2011.
The China Machinery and Equipment International Tendering Co., Ltd.is entrusted by the National Energy Administration to oversee the bidding process.
The project is estimated to cost about 1.6 billion yuan (240.5 million U.S. dollars) and will annually generate about 120 million KWH of power, according to statistics from Inner Mongolia's Reform and Development Commission.
Solar thermal power plants use the sun's heat to generate steam and drive turbines. They store heat during the day and use it to generate power at night, providing greater power supply stability than photovoltaic plants.
In addition, solar thermal plants do not need the expensive solar panels of photovoltaic plants. The production of solar panels also require significant amounts of energy.
Hangjinqi was chosen over other sites in northwest China because it was closer to the grid and had sufficient sunlight and water supplies, said Li Rong, head of Hangjinqi's investment promotion department, who has spent about five years working on the project.
The project was approved by the National Development and Reform Commission in 2007. Its initial planning and feasibility report was written by Inner Mongolia STP Development Co. Ltd., a joint venture between Inner Mongolia Lenon New Energy Liability Co. Ltd and the German company, Solar Millennium AG.
Experts say the opening of the plant could mark the beginning of China's solar thermal power industry.
Solar thermal power plants have greater potential than photovoltaic power plants and may even challenge traditional thermal power plants. "China doesn't want to lag behind in its development," said Wang Zhifeng, a researcher with the Institute of Electrical Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IEECAS).
Nevertheless, the project has some critics. "The project is not large enough. The larger a solar thermal power plant, the lower the cost for each KWH of electricity generated," said Ma Shenghong, another researcher with IEECAS. "Ideally, a solar thermal power plant needs to have a capacity of more than 200 megawatt."
But analysts say the current project could be a basis for future expansion.
Solar thermal energy is still in the experimental stages in China. It faces the obstacles of low efficiency and high developing costs, said Luo Zhentao, an expert with the China Association of Rural Energy Industry.
More than 30 leading Chinese companies and research institutes in solar energy came together to form the National Alliance for Solar Thermal Energy, Ministry of Science and Technology, in October 2009. The alliance is committed to building a 1,000 megawatt solar thermal power plant in west China between 2011 and 2015.
IEECAS is building a one-megawatt solar thermal power plant in rural Beijing's Badaling township. The experimental project, which cost 120 million yuan, is set to be completed by the end of this year.
Meanwhile, Chinese research institutes, including some under Tsinghua University, are working on devices that can capture and store more heat, which should bring down the cost of solar thermal power plants and provide greater power stability.
Both photovoltaic power and solar thermal power plants have their advantages and disadvantages. For the first kind of power plant, an industrial chain of plants already exists, while solar thermal power technologies have barely gotten out of the lab, Ma said.
"So far, there is no solar thermal power plant in China, not even in Asia," Ma added.
Solar thermal power can be applied extensively in parts of north and west China, such as Inner Mongolia, Gansu, Xinjiang, Ningxia, Qinghai and Tibet. But a few challenges need to be addressed before the industry can develop more rapidly, said Xu Honghua, an expert with the National Energy Expert Consultative Committee.
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