News Article
SolarReserve Completes Financing
US Renewables Group, a U.S. private equity investment firm focused on renewable power and advanced fuels, announced today that its portfolio company, SolarReserve, has closed financing for the 110 megawatt (MW) Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Project to be built near Tonopah, Nevada.
The Crescent Dunes project, which utilizes innovative, highly efficient and U.S. developed technology, will be the nation's first commercial scale solar power tower with fully integrated energy storage. The facility incorporates molten salt energy storage technology in a tower configuration and will be the largest of its kind in the world; providing reliable, zero-emission electricity generation on demand - day or night.
"We are very pleased with SolarReserve and the progress the company has made in achieving financial close of the Crescent Dunes project," said Lee Bailey, Managing Director of US Renewables Group and Chairman of the Board of SolarReserve. "US Renewables Group was the initial investor in the company, and we are honored to work with the additional investment partners and the management team who have been critically important in achieving this significant milestone."
"The Crescent Dunes Solar Energy Project will be a showcase for American technology," said Kevin Smith, CEO of SolarReserve. "The support from the Department of Energy and our investors has been vital in order to bring this flagship project to realization, creating jobs and providing a platform for exporting this leading solar thermal technology worldwide."
"We expect to create more than 600 direct jobs on the project site over the 30 month construction period, and more than 4,300 direct, indirect and induced jobs at companies throughout the U.S. that provide engineering, equipment supply and manufacturing, transportation and other value-added services. Orders and activities are already proceeding in more than twenty states across the country," Smith added.
As a result of the advanced energy storage technology, the project will generate more than 500,000 megawatt-hours per year (almost twice that of other solar technologies per megawatt of capacity), enough to power 75,000 homes during peak electricity periods. This solar technology is a genuine alternative to baseload coal, nuclear or natural gas burning electricity generation facilities, without the environmental impacts of mining, drilling, transporting, and combusting and emitting the toxic byproducts.