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Florida Ranch Show­cases Power of the Sun

Solar field Mosaic In: Florida Ranch Show­cases Power of the Sun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

Solar field Mosaic In: Florida Ranch Show­cases Power of the Sun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River

 

We applaud the progress toward sustainable energy.

Bab­cock has long cel­eb­rated its dis­tinc­tion as the first solar-powered town in the U.S., founder Syd Kit­son said, but hasn’t had a way to show the pub­lic how it all works. Now it does, “with this beau­ti­ful build­ing Flor­ida Power and Light built – a great ven­ture between us and our part­ners,” Kit­son said.

Read the original article here in the Shreveport Times.

Comments by OSFR historian Jim Tatum.
jim.tatum@oursantaferiver.org
– A river is like a life: once taken,
it cannot be brought back © Jim Tatum


 

The Times (Shreveport)

Fla. ranch show­cases power of the sun

Mini-museum to edu­cate vis­it­ors on solar energy

img?regionKey=jZytf96%2fjv2TKuUXqtUibQ%3d%3d&scale=254 In: Florida Ranch Show­cases Power of the Sun | Our Santa Fe River, Inc. (OSFR) | Protecting the Santa Fe River
Vis­it­ors to South­w­est Flor­ida’s Bab­cock Ranch will have the oppor­tun­ity to learn about solar power and how it is har­nessed.

FORT MYERS, Fla. –From three stor­ies up, the navy sea of tilted tiles stretches to the cypress-fringed hori­zon, 870 energy-gath­er­ing acres har­nessed by Bab­cock Ranch to power its grow­ing Char­lotte County com­munity in South­w­est Flor­ida.

Bab­cock’s Solar Ranch, a Flor­ida Power and Light Eco-Dis­cov­ery Cen­ter, is 2,500 square feet of all-ages edu­ca­tion: a fam­ily-friendly mini-museum of inter­act­ive exhib­its and games that amount to a crash course in the devel­op­ment’s elec­trical innov­a­tions.

Bab­cock has long cel­eb­rated its dis­tinc­tion as the first solar-powered town in the U.S., founder Syd Kit­son said, but hasn’t had a way to show the pub­lic how it all works. Now it does, “with this beau­ti­ful build­ing Flor­ida Power and Light built – a great ven­ture between us and our part­ners,” Kit­son said.

“What makes this so great is now people can actu­ally under­stand what it’s all about and (we can) teach young stu­dents that this is part of our future, that we can suc­cess­fully do something like this,” he said.

Kit­son said that from the begin­ning, the com­munity needed a source of renew­able energy to be truly sus­tain­able. Solar made per­fect sense. “This is the Sun­shine State after all,” he said.

But gath­er­ing the sun’s energy is one thing; stor­ing and dis­trib­ut­ing it is something else entirely. So the facil­ity includes one of the largest solar-plusstor­age sys­tems in the coun­try. Its 10 steel bat­tery units can each store 1 mega­watt of power, then dis­charge it for four hours, ensur­ing a steady sup­ply.

“(We) have always wanted Bab­cock to be a liv­ing labor­at­ory,” Kit­son said. “So Flor­ida Power and Light built one of the first solar-to-bat­tery facil­it­ies in the coun­try here at Bab­cock Ranch,” he said. “And they’ve been learn­ing from it (and) adding addi­tional bat­tery stor­age throughout the state of Flor­ida.”

The new cen­ter emphas­izes three of the com­munity’s core ini­ti­at­ives: tech­no­logy, energy and edu­ca­tion, illu­min­ated by videos and inter­act­ive exhib­its, includ­ing a Roblox-powered, elec­tric-vehicle driv­ing game.

The tower next door offers a view of Bab­cock’s two FPL solar fields, the Bab­cock Ranch and Bab­cock Pre­serve Solar Energy Cen­ters, where 687,000 pan­els deliver energy to the com­munity as well as FPL’s grid.

“Elec­tri­city on the elec­trical grid flows to the closest users,” Kit­son said, so hav­ing FPL’s on-site solar energy cen­ters so close to the com­munity’s sub­sta­tion means that Bab­cock Ranch is using that energy, “which is a big part of our com­munity’s iden­tity.”

Being con­nec­ted affords another advant­age: power in the dark.

“Bab­cock Ranch is con­nec­ted to FPL’s hardened elec­tric grid, which deliv­ers reli­able ser­vice from dif­fer­ent sources of gen­er­a­tion in all kinds of weather for our com­munity and all FPL cus­tom­ers,” he said. “Even when the sun isn’t shin­ing, we are going to con­tinue to get reli­able elec­tric ser­vice from the lar­ger FPL grid.”

Each facil­ity can gen­er­ate 75 mega­watts each, which ensures that their net pro­duc­tion exceeds the total amount the town con­sumes. The two facil­it­ies join more than 65 oth­ers that have saved cus­tom­ers more than $900 mil­lion – money that would have gone to fossil fuel, said Pam Rauch, FPL’s vice pres­id­ent of external affairs and eco­nomic devel­op­ment.

The move to solar is part of a lar­ger strategy, Rauch says. “We’ve replaced old inef­fi­cient power plants with new, ultra super-effi­cient plants and we’ve really inves­ted in these solar facil­it­ies, so not only are we pro­tect­ing our air and water, we’re sav­ing our cus­tom­ers a lot of money and we’re doing it in a much more resi­li­ent way,” she said.

Resi­li­ence is another of Bab­cock’s watch­words, and Kit­son points out this com­munity’s resi­li­ence has now been battle-tested.

Before Hur­ricane Ian, Kit­son and his part­ner Tom Hoban had prom­ised 5,000 neigh­bors they could all shel­ter in place, he said. “So the storm came … sat on top of us for eight hours. I remem­ber think­ing to myself what is going to hap­pen – oh my good­ness, all that work, all that invest­ment, all the time . … Now we’re being tested and we’re about to find out if all that would pay off.”

His answer came the morn­ing after the storm. “When the sun came up, I jumped in my truck and star­ted driv­ing around Bab­cock Ranch, and it was remark­able to see almost no dam­age and every­body else out­side almost dazed by what they had been through.”

The hardened grid had come through like a champ, he said.

“Hav­ing power throughout that entire exper­i­ence was almost sur­real for them,” Kit­son said. “Ima­gine sit­ting in your house with a strong Cat­egory 4 hur­ricane blow­ing over the top of you and you’re able to watch it in real time.”

The les­son? “If you do the right thing, if you want to be lead­ers, you make that invest­ment and it pays off,” he said.

The museum opens to the pub­lic on Wed­nes­day.

Founder, Bab­cock Ranch

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