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Tesla To Power Gigafactory With World's Largest Solar Rooftop Installation (inhabitat.com) 115

Last week, Tesla announced that its Gigafactory has begun mass production of lithium-ion battery cells in Nevada. But the company failed to mention one thrilling detail in their January 4 announcement: the Gigafactory could be powered by the world's largest solar rooftop installation. According to an investor handout, a 70-megawatt (MW) solar array along with ground solar panels could let the factory operate entirely on clean energy. Inhabitat reports: The 70 MW solar array would be around seven times larger than any rooftop arrays currently installed, according to Tesla's exciting handout released by Electrek and confirmed as genuine by The Verge. The rooftop array currently boasting the title of world's largest is a 11.5 MW installation in India. The United States' biggest rooftop array is a 10 MW array atop a California Whirlpool distribution center. SolarCity will likely manufacture the solar panels, according to The Verge, as Tesla acquired the solar energy company in November. Powerpacks will store any excess energy generated by the vast solar installation. Tesla said in the handout the "all-electric" factory will be able to run with greater efficiency and will produce zero carbon emissions. Heating and water use at the Gigafactory will also be sustainable. In the handout, Tesla said a large part of heating for the building would come from waste heat obtained from production processes. Also, "Gigafactory's closed-loop water supply system uses six different treatment systems to efficiently re-circulate about 1.5 million liters (that's around 400,000 gallons) of water, representing an 80 percent reduction in fresh water usage compared with standard processes." Tesla even said they're building a recycling facility at the Gigafactory that will be able to "safely reprocess" battery cells, packs, and modules to obtain metal usable in new cells.
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Tesla To Power Gigafactory With World's Largest Solar Rooftop Installation

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  • by networkBoy ( 774728 ) on Thursday January 12, 2017 @07:56PM (#53657881) Journal

    Totally makes sense.
    Don't know how much waste the recycle process produces, but not having to ship the material but across the street will save a bundle.

    • Totally makes sense.

      Sure does. Buy your own product for power and claim it as a capital expense, and get US taxpayers to help with a big tax credit. You get all that plus get to say Solar City sales are increasing. Smart move by Musk.

  • Dunno if (Score:5, Funny)

    by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Thursday January 12, 2017 @08:42PM (#53658093)
    Anyone RTFA, but below the Solar Factory is another article about Tesla building a freaking battery backup for the city of Los Angeles for use as a peak leveler.

    This is re-volting news for the anti solar PV crowd.

  • At least they're not planning to drive cars over those solar cells.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You can make viable solar powered cars, there's a semi-regular race across Australia. 100kph is quite possible over sustained distances.

      https://www.worldsolarchallenge.org/

      Problem is, not very comfortable cars. No A/C, the ride is horrible (very narrow, very hard wheels) and there's only room for the driver in most of them.

      I think there's a class for more conventional solar powered cars, a lot slower but still > 1kph.

      However, where the race happens in Australia is mostly sunny.

      • by Z80a ( 971949 )

        I'm not talking about solar panels on top of cars, i'm talking about cars on top of solar panels.
        The solar freaking highways.

  • by Zemran ( 3101 ) on Thursday January 12, 2017 @10:01PM (#53658527) Homepage Journal
    Solar panels in Nevada? A Heliostat would work as well and would not require such an unecological production process. Solar panels may be better than old tech power production but the chemicals used are pollutants. They are not as green as claimed but heliostat towers are far more green and in a area like Nevada. Why does a country like Morocco end up leading the world? https://www.revolvesolar.com/w... [revolvesolar.com]
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Solar panels in Nevada? A Heliostat would work as well and would not require such an unecological production process.

      Except Telsa owns a solar panel manufacturing plant, not a Heliostat manufacturing plant.

    • Heliostats don't scale down very well. It takes a crew of people to keep them running. Solar installations are set it and forget it and the depreciation very easy to calculate.
      • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )
        At 70 MW, it's not really a small scale installation anymore. You can afford to have 3 people to watch the thing in shifts. The AC / DC converters and night-time storage are all expensive. And panels will need replacing eventually.

        I think they chose PV solar because they own Solar City, and not for any other reason.
        • Oh, and I suppose huge arrays of mirrors, miles of pipe, gas turbines, pumps and generators grow on trees and are carbon neutral ;-)
    • As mentioned by others, Tesla produces and sells the panels themselves, they don't build heliostats.
      In addition, they have a lot of rooftop real-estate at their factory and presumably it's a lot easier and cheaper to cover the roof with panels than construct a heliostat on a neighboring piece of land.

      I'm sure that at a certain point one monolithic power plant has advantages in efficiency and other economies of scale, but I don't think Tesla+SolarCity is looking to become a traditional power utility company,

  • "...failed to mention one thrilling detail"
    "...according to Tesla's exciting handout"

    Is this what reporting has devolved to these days?
  • by RghtHndSd ( 4221695 ) on Friday January 13, 2017 @07:33AM (#53659955)
    They would need a massive battery to store all that power to make this work. They clearly haven't thought it through.
    • They would need a massive battery to store all that power to make this work. They clearly haven't thought it through.

      See, factories and cars are exactly the same, so they have thought it through very well... and are definitely not doing it to create a completely inefficient system with a PF of 0.21 just to make the future prospective buyers of their products want them more. Hey, there are solar panels there! That means they work! /sarcasm :)

  • Closed-loop water usage; large scale solar; on-site recycling. This sounds like an R&D project for SpaceX. No doubt much of the information gained by building and running this will feed back into other Musk projects.

    Of course, if they want to practice this in a place without an atmosphere, they could always build Gigafactory 2 in Boring, Oregon - or even it's twin town of Dull, Scotland ;-)

    • Indeed, that's the first thought that came to my mind too! All the infrastructure like that will be required for his Mars colony, this is an excellent way to do industrial-scale R&D. I guarantee that is a huge part of why he's doing this; at least in the long-term. Having the engineering experience of building huge solar arrays, multi-phase water recycling, large high-density battery arrays...it's all tech needed for an off-world colony. Also consider the pure electric vehicles; no need to import "ga
  • Guess that will be good for employee work/life balance.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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