PhotosLocation


Ernsthof_Solar_Park Latitude and Longitude:

49°42′26.64″N 9°28′28.56″E / 49.7074000°N 9.4746000°E / 49.7074000; 9.4746000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ernsthof Solar Park
CountryGermany
Location Wertheim
Coordinates 49°42′26.64″N 9°28′28.56″E / 49.7074000°N 9.4746000°E / 49.7074000; 9.4746000
StatusOperational
Commission date2010
Solar farm
Type Flat-panel PV
Site area85 ha (210 acres) Site plan
Power generation
Nameplate capacity34.4 MW
Annual net output
  • 6.9 GWh
External links
Website www.hellenstein-solarwind.de/realisierte-projekte/solarenergie/solarpark-ernsthof.html

Ernsthof Solar Park is a photovoltaic power station near Dörlesberg, Wertheim, Germany. [1] It has a capacity of 34.4 MWp making it the largest Solar Park in the state of Baden-Württemberg. Phase I of 6.88 MWp and covering an area of 16.6 hectares (41 acres), consisted of 31,280 modules by LDK Solar Energy Systems was completed on March 30, 2010. The second phase of 7.25 MWp was completed in December 2010, [2] and it was expanded to 29.5 MW and then to 34.4 MW, with over 120,000 modules being fitted in December. Ernsthof East is 6.8 MW and Ernsthof West is 27.5 MW. The total area is 85 ha (210 acres). Ernsthof is part of the Tauberlandpark, a planned 72 MW solar park consisting of Ernsthof and Solarpark Gickelfeld (28 MW), which has been delayed due to the political uncertainty of solar parks of over 10 MW receiving the FIT. [3] [4] They may need, instead, to sign a Power Purchase Agreement with the grid distribution power company, which is better than subdividing large projects into multiple smaller segments just to qualify for the FIT. [5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Large-Scale Photovoltaic Power Plants Archived January 1, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Solarpark Ernsthof". Archived from the original on 2012-01-14. Retrieved 2012-04-20.
  3. ^ Teilprojekte des Solarparks Ernsthof in Betrieb
  4. ^ "Der Tauberlandpark - solare Energie im Einklang mit der Natur". Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2012-04-20.
  5. ^ Going Solar: Why Power Purchase Agreements Are a Low-risk Choice