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Ivanpah Solar Power Facility

Concentrated solar thermal power station in the Mojave Desert of California

Ivanpah Solar Power Facility

Concentrated solar thermal power station in the Mojave Desert of California

FieldValue
nameIvanpah Solar Electric Generating System
imageIvanpah Solar Power Facility (1).jpg
image_captionLooking north towards Ivanpah Facility's eastern boiler tower from Interstate 15
coordinates
countryUnited States
locationnear Ivanpah, San Bernardino County, California
statusO
construction_beganOctober 27, 2010
commissionedFebruary 13, 2014
cost$2.2 billion ($ in dollars)
employees60
ownerNRG Energy
BrightSource Energy
Google
solar_typeCSP
solar_csp_technologyT
solar_collectors173,500
ps_site_area3500 acres
solar_site_resource2,717 kWh/m2/yr
th_fuel_primarySolar energy and natural gas
ps_cooling_sourceAir cooling
ps_units_operational3
ps_units_manu_modelSiemens SST-900
ps_electrical_capacityUnit 1: 126 MW
Units 2 and 3: 133 MW each.
Planned: 440 MW gross, Build: 392 MW gross, 377 MW net
ps_annual_generation856
ps_label1Power purchase agreement
ps_data1$0.135 / kWh (estimated)
website
ps_electrical_cap_fac24.1% (2018 actual) / 28.5% (planned)

BrightSource Energy Google Units 2 and 3: 133 MW each. Planned: 440 MW gross, Build: 392 MW gross, 377 MW net

The Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System is a concentrated solar thermal plant located in the Mojave Desert at the base of Clark Mountain in California, across the state line from Primm, Nevada. It was slated to close in 2026, but that decision has been reversed by the California Public Utilities Commission. The facility derives its name from its proximity to Ivanpah, California, which lies within the Mojave National Preserve in San Bernardino County and which derives its name from the Chemehuevi word for "clean water".

The plant has a gross capacity of 392 megawatts (MW). solar power towers. The first unit of the system was connected to the electrical grid in September 2013 for an initial synchronization test. The facility formally opened on February 13, 2014. At that time, it was the world's largest solar thermal power station.

The $2.2 billion facility was developed by BrightSource Energy and Bechtel. The largest investor in the project was NRG Energy which contributed $300 million. Google contributed $168 million. The United States government provided a $1.6 billion loan guarantee and the plant is built on federal land. In 2010, the project was scaled back from its original 440 MW design to avoid disturbing the habitat of the desert tortoise.

In January 2025, the plant’s co-owner NRG Energy announced it was unwinding power purchase agreements with Pacific Gas & Electric Company and Southern California Edison and, subject to regulatory approval, would begin closing the plant in early 2026, readying the site to potentially be repurposed for a different type of solar energy. The facility, though cost effective at the time it was planned (2009), is now twice as expensive to run as solar photovoltaic technology, which has decreased in price much more rapidly than was expected in the 15 years since Ivanpah's construction began. The power companies purchasing electricity from Ivanpah said that they expect the closure will save their ratepayers money. NRG declined to say how much of the $1.6bn loans guaranteed by the government remained unpaid as of 2025.

Description

Aerial photograph of Ivanpah Solar Power Facility
Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System with all three towers under load, Feb 2014. Taken from the I-15.
The bright spots of Ivanpah are clearly visible from above Las Vegas and further.

The Ivanpah system consists of three solar thermal power plants on 3,500 acre of public land near the California–Nevada border in the Southwestern United States. Initially it was planned with 440 MW gross on 4000 acre of land, but then downgraded by 12%. It is west of south Interstate 15, north of Ivanpah, California, and adjacent to the Mountain Pass mine, the United States' only source of rare-earth minerals. The facility is visible from the I-15, the adjacent Mojave National Preserve, the Mesquite Wilderness, and the Stateline Wilderness. It is also visible from the Primm Valley resort area to the northeast.

Fields of heliostat mirrors focus sunlight on receivers located on centralized solar power towers. The receivers generate steam to drive specially adapted steam turbines.

For the first plant, the largest-ever fully solar-powered steam turbine generator set was ordered, with a 123 MW Siemens SST-900 single-casing reheat turbine. Siemens also supplied instrumentation and control systems. The plants use BrightSource Energy's "Luz Power Tower 550" (LPT 550) technology which heats the steam to 550 °C directly in the receivers. The plants have no storage.

Final approval for the project was granted in October 2010. On October 27, 2010, Governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, and other dignitaries gathered in the Mojave Desert to break the ground for the construction.

View of the Ivanpah Solar Power Facility from the Yates Well Road exit of the I-15 Freeway.

The largest investor in the project was NRG Energy, a generating company based in Princeton, New Jersey. It contributed $300 million. The project also received an investment of $168 million from Google. In November 2011, Google announced that it would no longer invest in the facility due to the rapid decline of the price of photovoltaic systems. $90,000,000 in financing was provided through the EB-5 Investor Immigration program, managed in this case by CMB Regional Centers.

The project, which had a total cost of about $2.18 billion, received a $1.6 billion loan guarantee from the United States Department of Energy. The facility developed contracts to sell about two-thirds of the power it generated to the Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), and the rest to Southern California Edison (SCE). PG&E announced in 2025 that it was terminating its contracts subject to approval by regulators.

|File:Ivanpah Solar Power Facility Online.jpg|Ivanpah Solar Power Facility online |File:Ivanpah Solar Power Facility.jpg|Ivanpah's eastern tower online. Note the sunlight glare on either side of the boiler. |File:One of the three towers of the Ivanpah Solar Power Facility.jpg|One of the three towers of the Ivanpah Solar Power Facility |File:BrightSource Energy Luz Power Tower 550 at full load (installed at Ivanpah Stateline Solar Facility, Nipton, CA).JPG|A close-up of one of the boilers taken with very short exposure |File:Ivanpah Solar Towers.jpg|Solar towers in full operation |File:Ivanpah, USA.jpg|Satellite photo of Ivanpah (center)

Fossil fuel consumption

The plant burns natural gas each morning to commence operation. The Wall Street Journal reported, "Instead of ramping up the plant each day before sunrise by burning one hour's worth of natural gas to generate steam, Ivanpah needs more than four times that much." On August 27, 2014, the State of California approved Ivanpah to increase its annual natural gas consumption from 328000000 ft3 of natural gas, as previously approved, to 525000000 ft3. In 2014, the plant burned 868e9 BTU of natural gas emitting 46,084 metric tons of carbon dioxide, which is nearly twice the pollution threshold at which power plants and factories in California are required to participate in the state's cap and trade program to reduce carbon emissions.{{cite news | access-date =23 October 2015 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20151022223835/http://www.ocregister.com/articles/plant-688596-gas-energy.html | archive-date =22 October 2015 | url-status =live

The facility uses three Rentech Type-D water tube boilers and three night time preservation boilers. The California Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission approved for each a stack "130 ft high and 60 inch in diameter" and consumption of 242500 ft3/h of fuel.

Economic impact

BrightSource estimated that the Ivanpah facility would provide 1,000 jobs at the peak of construction, 86 permanent jobs, and total economic benefits of $3 billion.

The project received a $1.6 billion loan guarantee from the United States Department of Energy. According to Synapse Energy Economics, the estimated construction cost for the facility of $5,561.00 per kW fell between that of coal and nuclear power plants.{{cite tech report |access-date=2014-03-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140630144840/http://www.synapse-energy.com/Downloads/SynapsePaper.2008-07.0.Coal-Plant-Construction-Costs.A0021.pdf |archive-date=2014-06-30 |url-status=live |access-date=2014-03-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140512131340/http://www.synapse-energy.com/Downloads/SynapsePaper.2008-07.0.Nuclear-Plant-Construction-Costs.A0022.pdf |archive-date=2014-05-12 |url-status=live

In November 2014, the facility's investors applied for a $539 million federal grant to finance their federal loan.

Performance

Contracted power-delivery performance of 640 GWh/year from Units 1 and 3 and 336 GWh from Unit 2 was met by 2017, following sharply reduced production in the first few years of operation, particularly in the start-up year of 2014.

In November 2014, the Associated Press reported that the facility was producing only "about half of its expected annual output". The California Energy Commission issued a statement blaming this on "clouds, jet contrails and weather". Performance improved in 2015 to about 650 GWh. However, NRG Energy said in its November quarterly report that Ivanpah would likely not meet its contractual obligations to provide power to PG&E during the year, raising the risk of default on its Power Purchase Agreement. PG&E had a contract to receive 640 GWh/year from Units 1 and 3, while SCE was supposed to receive 336 GWh from Unit 2, at a price of about $200/MWh (20¢/kWh). In March 2016, PG&E agreed not to declare the plant in default for at least four months in return for an undisclosed sum from the owners.

In June 2015, The Wall Street Journal reported, "15 months after starting up, the plant is producing just 40% of [its expected more than a million megawatt-hours of electricity each year], according to data from the U.S. Energy Department." Performance improved dramatically in the second year. CleanTechnica reported with respect to units 1 and 3 that "in 2015, PG&E customers received about 97% of Ivanpah's contracted electrons, which is a massive improvement over its first year".

By 2017, due to improvements, the plant was meeting the contract output requirements.

The steam plant was designed for 28.72% gross efficiency. The local irradiance near the area is about 7.4 kWh/m2/day (annual average) for a total solar energy flow in the visible spectrum of 2.717 MWh/m2 yearly.

One heliostat mirror is a 75.6 ft2 reflecting surface,{{cite web |access-date=18 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140318092410/http://www.energy.ca.gov/sitingcases/ivanpah/ |archive-date=18 March 2014 |url-status=live

May 2016 fire

On May 19, 2016, a small fire was reported when misaligned mirrors reflected sunlight into a level of Unit 3 tower not designed to collect power, requiring the tower to shut down for repairs. As another of the three power-generating units was already offline for scheduled maintenance, the plant was left with only one third of its installation functional. Unit 3 resumed operation on June 8, 2016. All three units were back in operation by June 20, 2016. Solar thermal electricity production in California peaked at 703 MW on that day, up from 452 MW on June 7 when two units were offline.

Awards

In August 2014, Ivanpah was awarded the "Plant of the Year" award from Power magazine. In February 2012, Ivanpah was awarded the CSP (Concentrating Solar Power) Project of the Year by Solar Power Generation USA.

Environmental impacts

The Ivanpah installation was estimated, before operations started, to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by more than 400,000 tons annually. It was designed to minimize impacts on the natural environment compared to some photovoltaic solar facilities because the use of heliostats does not require as much grading of the land. The project was built on ecologically intact desert habitat. The facility was fenced off to keep out some terrestrial wildlife. However, birds faced the risk of collision with the heliostat mirrors or from burning in solar flux created by the mirror field.

In 2012, the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) issued a report on the project, citing water concerns, damage to visual resources, and impacts on important desert species. To conserve scarce desert water, LPT 550 uses air-cooling to convert steam back into water. Compared to conventional wet-cooling, this results in a 90 percent reduction in water usage. The water is then returned to the boiler in a closed process.

Another potential issue is the effect of mirror glare on airplane pilots. Additionally, "the power towers have 'receiver units' at their top on which the mirror fields focus their reflected light. During operation, these receiver units become extremely hot, such that they glow and appear brightly lit. ... Because they are high above the ground, these glowing receiver units will be a visible distraction to persons at many of the KOPs [Key Observation Points], including travelers utilizing I-15."

According to the State of California Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission Opening Briefs regarding this project, "the project itself is visually imposing. It would cover roughly 4,000 acres, most of which would be covered with mirror fields. The panoramic expanse of mirror arrays would present strong textural contrast with the intact, natural character of the desert floor [and] would rise to a height of roughly 459 ft; an additional 10 to above that height would consist of lighting to meet Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) requirements."

Desert tortoise

The solar power facility under construction in August 2013

The Ivanpah Solar power project was built on 6 mi2 of public land in the south central Mojave Desert. Project construction was temporarily halted in the spring of 2011 due to the suspected impacts on desert tortoises. Construction resumed when the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) found the project was not likely to jeopardize the endangered desert tortoise. BrightSource also installed fencing to keep wildlife out of the area. In 2010, the project was scaled back from the original 440 MW design, to avoid building on the habitat of the desert tortoise.

Many desert tortoises found on the site were relocated to other parts of the Mojave Desert. However, environmentalists raised concerns that relocated tortoises were more likely to die due to the stresses involved.

Birds

During the trial of the plant in September 2013, thirty-four (34) dead birds were found at the plant. Fifteen had heavily burned feathers, which staff at the plant referred to as "streamers" because they were burned in flight by the intense radiation from the heliostat mirrors. From February through June 2014, a team of biologists monitoring the number of bird deaths reported a total of 290.

In April 2014, the USFWS reported that 141 dead birds, including peregrine falcon, barn owl and yellow-rumped warbler had been collected at Ivanpah in October 2013. Forty-seven of the birds' deaths were attributed to solar flux. According to a report by the Associated Press, "Ivanpah might act as a 'mega-trap' for wildlife, with the bright light of the plant attracting insects, which in turn attract insect-eating birds that fly to their death in the intensely focused light rays." Bird kill mitigation strategies were considered, including proven, environmentally safe technologies such as avian radars and LRADs to keep birds away from the site, covering ponds to discourage waterbirds from loitering, and clearing additional land around the plant to make it less attractive and more visible to birds in flight.{{Cite web | access-date = 2014-12-07 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141224042933/http://spectrum.ieee.org/energywise/green-tech/solar/ivanpah-solar-plant-turns-birds-into-smoke-streamers | archive-date = 2014-12-24 | url-status = live | access-date = 2014-12-07 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141226113505/http://docketpublic.energy.ca.gov/PublicDocuments/09-AFC-07C/TN202538_20140623T154647_Exh_3107_Kagan_et_al_2014.pdf | archive-date = 2014-12-26 | url-status = live

In April 2015 The Wall Street Journal reported that "biologists working for the state estimated that 3,500 birds died at Ivanpah in the span of a year, many of them burned alive while flying through a part of the solar installment where air temperatures can reach 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit [540 °C]".

In late 2015, Brightsource released the results of the first full year monitoring bird and bat deaths at the Ivanpah solar plant. The company reported that during a year of study supervised by the California Division of Wildlife, the number of observed bird deaths, adjusted upward to account for inefficiencies of the carcass-counting, were around 3,500 bird deaths per year caused by the Ivanpah solar plant. The Ivanpah plant took steps to further reduce bird deaths.

The initial reports of high avian casualties have been disputed ever since initial reports surfaced. In September 2014, for example, Renewable Energy World suggested "With its claim of 28,000 dead birds from Ivanpah, the Associated Press syndicated a story, spreading alarm about concentrated solar power (CSP) plants, which was not grounded in facts, but on one opponent's speculation."

In September 2016, federal biologists said about 6,000 birds die from collisions or immolation annually while chasing flying insects around the facility's towers.

Ivanpah was covered in the 2019 documentary Planet of the Humans.

Production

Ivanpah Solar electric production is as follows (in megawatt-hours, MWh).

Ivanpah 1 (126 MW gross)

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecSunNGTotal151,9660151,966201,0758,902209,975243,47912,176255,655228,13611,390239,526231,14211,334242,476234,6818,798243,037270,94114,192285,133223,35711,794235,151217,5975,174222,771Total2,002,37483,7602,085,690
20145,6324,4604,9469,13015,87923,72212,27716,80719,74317,45515,9935,922
20154,44816,47120,01025,28112,38025,12619,57523,40421,33311,81316,23013,904
20167,59923,68618,42713,28426,00632,87531,79624,40326,86020,61619,66310,440
201711,31011,69912,28311,65628,70934,79721,74223,43724,80328,77714,73615,577
201816,8819,71418,82514,01919,70436,20621,40026,06029,26720,17318,05512,172
201913,7842,17813,82320,27020,03132,26632,02632,45024,14027,33316,3808,356
202012,35017,96114,54722,35533,69130,61638,06033,29927,32427,04118,1769,713
202113,1037,95819,13224,60927,89623,31916,98826,66424,90415,77722,02712,774
202215,8988,19118,71726,20720,13331,04518,18316,48817,54325,33815,1089,920

Ivanpah 2 (133 MW gross)

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecSunNGTotal129,2640129,263210,5158,529219,044190,4129,270199,682226,8509,974236,824264,00913,045277,054258,45813,184271,642269,14313,402282,545242,09410,251252,345261,3336,014267,347Total2,052,07883,6692,135,747
20142,1671,3045,6049,59613,02015,82514,35012,81214,44618,15715,3506,632
20156,9098,91519,58524,36417,24326,20618,95323,90022,62812,47722,22215,642
201610,07017,61519,4365,62609,35933,38625,28125,91820,38921,01211,590
201713,3819,22016,75413,35929,20122,80022,18120,20425,70829,25316,57717,736
201813,53616,42920,39921,25429,24639,35420,59928,46732,36421,37520,43613,595
201915,08513,20712,63519,33122,64734,93033,85636,73525,34330,83219,3107,731
202016,1805,0445,29721,51737,64533,43839,33334,85229,91526,89620,82711,601
202113,81110,76921,34130,29728,08225,52119,69129,71226,24417,02719,54810,302
202216,68310,16721,39027,17735,48733,87123,17817,42023,43228,85917,78011,903

Ivanpah 3 (133 MW gross)

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecSunNGTotal137,8560137,856215,5738,530224,103236,68411,018247,702231,91311,875243,788266,3389,988276,326246,78410,751257,535275,73312,890288,623240,24611,974252,220273,6945,352279,046Total2,124,82182,3782,207,199
20142,6863,8669,4096,10715,88524,7289,34014,4519,56220,40115,8345,587
201510,5314,88717,49525,65918,33326,20223,15325,50222,18612,68122,02215,452
20167,77025,95320,54619,53917,43023,48733,66715,94729,43720,30721,37712,242
201713,16412,90921,60515,57429,10340,08022,47124,00124,73019,7559,48810,618
201818,45617,82019,95726,78727,48840,17721,19824,04730,07520,84819,38010,093
20196,34211,81821,79419,74422,02934,80331,63832,21423,25126,68317,7009,431
20206,81818,82513,53423,02336,48632,56236,50032,98328,78627,62519,68511,796
20215,59019,66121,85931,74032,64615,05719,67629,28423,15517,44522,47813,629
202211,22622,71424,67528,16235,88931,17622,99819,17324,21627,80219,03211,973

Ivanpah total (392 MW gross)

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecSunNGTotal419,0850419,085627,16125,961653,122670,57532,464703,039686,89933,239720,138761,48934,367795,856739,48132,733772,214815,81740,484856,301705,69734,019739,716752,62416,540769,164Total6,178,828249,8076,428,635
201410,4859,63019,95924,83344,78464,27535,96744,07043,75156,01347,17718,141
201521,88830,27357,09075,30447,95677,53461,68172,80666,14736,97160,47444,998
201625,43967,25458,40938,44943,43665,72198,84965,63182,21561,31262,05234,272
201738,30533,82850,64240,58987,01397,67766,66467,64275,24177,80540,80143,931
201848,87343,96359,18162,06076,438115,73763,19778,75491,70662,39657,87135,860
201935,21127,20348,25259,34564,707101,99997,520101,39972,73484,84853,47825,518
202035,34841,83033,37866,895107,82296,616113,893101,13486,02581,56258,68833,110
202132,50438,38862,33286,64688,62463,89756,35585,66074,30350,24964,05336,705
202243,80741,07264,78281,54691,51996,09264,35953,08165,19181,99951,92033,796

Ivanpah was advertised as designed to produce 940,000 MWh of electricity per year, based on its nameplate capacity and assumed capacity factor. In its second year of operation, Ivanpah's production of 653,122 MWh of net electricity was 69.5 percent of this value, ramping up from 44.6 percent in the first year. The commissioning of a new thermal plants requires up to four years to achieve 100% operating level, from the first grid connection to full production.{{cite web |title=EuroTrough Helped Cut Ramp-Up Time of China's 100 MW Urat CSP |url=https://www.solarpaces.org/eurotrough-cut-ramp-up-in-china-100-mw-urat-csp%E2%80%A8

Ivanpah total annual production

Fossil fuel use

Ivanpah Solar's use of gas is as follows, expressed in million British thermal units (Btu) as reported. For comparison to the above charts, 1 MWh is about 3.4 million Btu.

Ivanpah 1

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecTotal270,463411,118481,053357,859453,283121,914Total1,942,972
201431,76018,3699,70322,76727,19859,73937,60924,26124,38714,670NRNR
20158,24928,78929,35243,61832,78349,35150,81545,30138,39320,48530,57733,405
201625,62037,07252,38227,24853,66359,47759,28148,80338,49232,97424,62121,420
201728,74128,07423,26740,72626,00158,77852,52249,03650,71420,25220,90115,212
201836,31415,81635,32424,08730,42170,15963,49471,11735,15429,44011,15330,804
201938,47610,50531,69341,240n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Ivanpah 2

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecTotal274,873407,192364,881402,165497,660119,195Total1,923,932
201441,65713,64518,31916,23421,42034,32438,98422,10522,10012,97613,66319,446
201514,63019,54432,43829,60042,06349,99939,17143,54039,89424,94933,99437,370
201636,86129,87449,99614,780021,70652,31538,05734,09234,58729,52523,088
201728,55026,09134,81860,62630,14040,42843,74423,29542,71628,15724,56219,038
201832,52524,10636,82823,58042,92156,04052,33682,81874,22228,56311,88222,839
201942,76814,56722,49839,362n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Ivanpah 3

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecTotal262,298427,676444,474401,523378,335108,395Total1,900,858
201429,30918,49822,53213,62425,32156,29233,50826,33721,48715,390NRNR
201517,4738,46029,07238,64243,70848,69540,11560,24936,54720,54744,19339,975
201636,64541,79952,80142,71427,00641,57352,57722,03133,36134,51229,58029,875
201730,93027,66032,17335,45926,45665,67747,95643,36352,54415,86711,49311,945
201836,66728,58357,74653,7687,08659,95421,13935,93036,43521,6615,91813,448
201914,88722,45639,32931,723n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

Ivanpah total

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecTotal774,5251,245,9861,290,3081,217,9121,329,278349,504Total5,790,918
2014102,72650,51250,55452,62573,939150,355110,10172,70367,97443,036NRNR
201540,35256,79390,862111,860118,554148,045130,101149,090114,83465,981108,764110,750
201699,126108,745155,17984,74280,669122,756164,173108,891105,945102,07383,62674,383
201788,22181,82590,258136,81182,597164,883144,222115,694145,97464,27656,95646,195
2018105,50668,505129,898110,43580,428186,153136,969189,865145,81179,66428,95367,091
201996,13147,52893,520112,325n/an/an/an/an/an/an/an/a

NR = Not reported

n/a = Not available

References

References

  1. Overton, Thomas W.. (August 2014). "Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System Earns ''POWER''{{'}}s Highest Honor".
  2. Michael R. Blood and Brian Skolof, [http://bigstory.ap.org/article/huge-thermal-plant-opens-solar-industry-grows "Huge thermal plant opens as solar industry grows"] {{webarchive. link. (2014-02-22 , [[Associated Press]], February 13, 2014.)
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  4. (2017-06-01). "Loan Programs Office: IVANPAH". [[US Department of Energy]].
  5. "Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System". [[National Renewable Energy Laboratory]] (NREL).
  6. Trabish, Herman. (2014-02-13). "Ivanpah: World's Biggest Solar Power Tower Project Goes On-Line - But will more concentrated solar power follow?". [[Greentech Media]].
  7. Paddison, Laura. (February 13, 2025). "This alien-like field of mirrors in the desert was once the future of solar energy. It's closing after just 11 years". CNN.
  8. (5 December 2025). "Ivanpah solar plant off Interstate 15 to remain open".
  9. [https://www.kcet.org/socal-focus/cities-and-landmarks-the-etymology-of-the-california-desert KCET - Cities and Landmarks, the Etymology of the California Desert]
  10. "Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System Tower 2 - the Skyscraper Center".
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