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Saturday, 20 December 2014 09:42

Duke Energy buys RR solar farm

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Duke Energy Renewables, a commercial business unit of Duke Energy, Friday announced it has acquired a 20-megawatt solar project in Roanoke Rapids from Geenex and ET Solar Energy Corp.

The Halifax Solar Power Project, developed in partnership between Geenex, a leading solar energy developer, and ET Capital, an ET Solar energy investment company based in California, was placed into service this month. Duke Energy Renewables will own and operate the site, the company said in a statement.

A transaction price was not immediately known.

“ET Solar and Geenex have created a quality solar facility, and we are excited to add it to our more than 60-megawatts of successful operating projects in Eastern North Carolina,” said Duke Energy Renewables President Greg Wolf. “We also appreciate and plan to support their community-centric vision for the project.”

The project was built on the site of a decommissioned airport in Halifax County, putting idle property into productive use.

“We are proud of the solar farm we built, but even more exciting is the partnership with the community,” said Georg Veit, CEO of Geenex. “In a unique economic development agreement with the county, we have broken ground on our Solar Center of Excellence, which will provide education about solar power and work in partnership with the schools in the region and Halifax Community College to train solar energy technicians.”

“The solar project will inject an estimated $75 million into Halifax County between 2014 and 2029, and it created more than 150 jobs during peak construction,” said Dennis She, ET Solar’s president and CEO.

The project is located in Dominion North Carolina Power’s service territory, and the energy generated from the solar site will be sold through a 15-year agreement with the utility.

 

The system employs 866 AE 3TL string inverters of 23.2KW AC capacity each and has about 100,000 ET Solar and Chint solar modules. It can produce enough electricity to power approximately 3,500 homes. 

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