Since its inception, Abengoa´s solar business has acquired a wealth of experience along the different stages of the value chain within the solar thermal business and, by extension, within the industrial production segment.
Abengoa market leadership should enable us to offer the most competitive prices for solar power generation via our projects, while helping us to monetize investments in R&D+i by harnessing the growth of third-party businesses.
Abengoa´s solar business focuses its industrial production activity on:
Developing new technologies and components, which can be applied to the company’s own plants and also sold to third parties, is one of the segments in which Abengoa´s solar business is basing the future growth of the business.
Thanks to its status as the world’s leading company in terms of concentrating solar power in operation, Abengoa has built up a wealth of knowledge in plant operation and maintenance, enabling it to make groundbreaking improvements to plant design and operating methods. These advances, coupled with its heavy commitment to R&D+i, have made Abengoa a unique company capable of offering new tried and tested technological components that are highly efficient and competitive. The company is also able to generate added value by selling its “expert knowledge” on to third parties.
Significant milestones in industrial production for 2012 included:
Abengoa has already conducted tests confirming the efficiency of the technology by installing three pilot plants at Puertollano with a combined total of 300 kW, meaning the technology is now optimally positioned for a marketing drive over the coming years.
Included below are the key industrial production figures for 2012:
The company supplied facilities in Chile, Brazil, Canada and the United States with parabolic troughs for industrial applications, totaling over 10 MW. Abengoa Solar, with the collaboration of Abengoa Chile, has designed, engineered and supplied parabolic troughs for the world’s largest industrial solar steam complex and the first commercial solar thermal facility in Latin America. The plant is located in Antofagasta, Chile, and has a thermal capacity of 10 MW. Abengoa has also supplied troughs for a hot water installation on the premises of Kraft Foods in Brazil; for a small demonstration plant at Red River College of Applied Arts, Science and Technology in Winnipeg, Canada, with the plant up and running since July; and for two small 40 kW facilities at the premises of Cummins Power Generation in both Fridley and Shoreview, Minnesota.
Turning our attention to operation and maintenance equipment, Abengoa supplied roughly 20 Condor reflectometers to different plants within Spain and abroad, while also carrying out a technology transfer to the Spanish National Center for Renewable Energies (CENER) and another to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in the United States. Ten mirror cleaning vehicles were also sold to various parabolic trough plants.
In addition, Abengoa supplied the final four trackers to complete the installation of sixteen high concentration photovoltaic trackers at the Spanish Institute for Concentration Photovoltaics Systems (ISFOC), while also supplying trackers for pilot plants in Asia, the Middle East and South America.
Our progress made with proprietary technology has also enabled us to continue cutting generation costs and to monetize our investments in R&D+i through technology transfers to third parties for the construction of solar power plants. We are confident that this line of business will continue to generate significant revenue for the company over the coming years on the back of our proactive management of our technologies portfolio, which already features a number of new developments, coupled with a solid industrial protection strategy.
Last but not least, the company has reached a total of 743 MW in operation, a figure that will continue to grow over 2013 following the operational start-up of some of the 910 MW currently under construction. For this reason, streamlining the operation and maintenance of our plants is key to the success of the solar power business.
Since 2007, when our first commercial plant, PS10, was commissioned, and thanks to the steady start-up over the years of new solar power plants, embracing both power tower and parabolic trough technologies, we have been able to gradually optimize both plant start-up and operation and maintenance, responding well to what has become a very demanding process. Abengoa has implemented a standardized plant operation monitoring system, allowing us to track changes in key plant operating figures and carry out benchmarking. The company has also been harnessing synergies, enabling us to group plants together at solar platforms, or as part of largescale international complexes. With the goal being continuous improvement and to learn from past experiences, Abengoa has rolled out training programs in O&M and on how to capitalize experience so that our operators can tackle the operation and maintenance of new plants with greater likelihood of success.
Abengoa will remain committed to innovation in 2013, specifically in those technologies flagged as key, with a view to keeping ahead of its competitors, while also lowering costs and making its technologies more efficient. It also intends to channel much of its resources into expanding its portfolio of components by seeking out new technological partners and strategic alliances with leading companies and institutions, shaping marketing strategies for its current portfolio of technologies and in development, and securing protection for its intellectual property, thus helping to ensure the ongoing technological and commercial leadership of Abengoa.
PS20 heliostat field
ASUP 140 heliostat
Condor reflectometer
Parabolic trough cleaning truck
New generation HCPV tracker
E2 trough in place at the Solana solar field
Industrial parabolic trough