At the start of the weekend, and quite by accident, I found myself aloft and looking directly into the glare of the Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System. I can tell you that not only does it roast birds in mid-air, it certainly seems to be a hazard to aviation. First, a story today from AP, via my local newspaper. Photos follow.
Emerging desert solar plants scorch birds in midair-Chico Enterprise-Record

IVANPAH DRY LAKE (AP) >> Workers at a state-of-the-art solar plant in the Mojave Desert have a name for birds that fly through the plant’s concentrated sun rays — “streamers,” for the smoke plume that comes from birds that ignite in midair.
Federal wildlife investigators who visited the BrightSource Energy plant last year and watched as birds burned and fell, reporting an average of one “streamer” every two minutes, are urging California officials to halt the operator’s application to build a still-bigger version.
The investigators want the halt until the full extent of the deaths can be assessed. Estimates per year now range from a low of about a thousand by BrightSource to 28,000 by an expert for the Center for Biological Diversity environmental group.
The deaths are “alarming. It’s hard to say whether that’s the location or the technology,” said Garry George, renewable-energy director for the California chapter of the Audubon Society. “There needs to be some caution.”
The bird kills mark the latest instance in which the quest for clean energy sometimes has inadvertent environmental harm. Solar farms have been criticized for their impacts on desert tortoises, and wind farms have killed birds, including numerous raptors.
“We take this issue very seriously,” said Jeff Holland, a spokesman for NRG Solar of Carlsbad, the second of the three companies behind the plant. The third, Google, deferred comment to its partners.
The $2.2 billion plant, which launched in February, is at Ivanpah Dry Lake near the California-Nevada border. The operator says it is the world’s biggest plant to employ so-called power towers.
More than 300,000 mirrors, each the size of a garage door, reflect solar rays onto three boiler towers each looming up to 40 stories high. The water inside is heated to produce steam, which turns turbines that generate enough electricity for 140,000 homes.
Sun rays sent up by the field of mirrors are bright enough to dazzle pilots flying in and out of Las Vegas and Los Angeles.
Full story here: http://www.chicoer.com/breakingnews/ci_26357771/emerging-desert-solar-plants-scorch-birds-midair
===============================================================
I drove to the Heartland ICCC9 conference in Las Vegas, NV, (my “Big Oil” charter jet never showed up) taking the US395 route through Nevada on the way to the conference, but on the return trip, I took the Interstate 15 to SR58 route to Bakersfield, and that had me drive by the Ivanpah Solar Power plant. I had never seen the desert air glow before in broad daylight, so I stopped to take some photos.
Here is the view from Interstate-15 looking west at the southernmost tower:
And here are all three solar towers from the same vantage point:
Click the images for full size ones to see details.
I have to say it was an eerie sight seeing the air glow that electric blue color like you see on carbon-arc searchlights at night, but instead being visible during the day. The amount of power being concentrated in the air is quite impressive.
Dr. Roy Spencer also took photos and wrote about the Ivanpah Solar power system when he drove out of Las Vegas leaving the ICCC9 conference. He got closer than I did and beat me to the story, so I never published my photos, figuring there was little I could improve upon.
On Friday, in the early afternoon, coming back from a work related trip in Florida, I found myself having a short layover in Las Vegas, to connect to my flight to Sacramento. I’ve flown the Vegas to Sacramento route dozens of times, and so there is little I haven’t seen on the ground from that vantage point, so I didn’t even bother looking out the window. I was reading a book.
I was surprised all of the sudden when the cabin was briefly lit up by a flash, and I thought to myself that we must have passed some air traffic pretty darn close and gotten a sun glint off the aircraft, looking out the window, I discovered I was being dazzled from the ground, and then I knew what it was.
I got up to get my cell phone/camera out of my laptop bag in the overhead, and was griping to myself, “c’mon, c’mon, BOOT dammit!” waiting for Android to load. By the time I was able to get the camera app running the glare had passed, and all I got was a couple of photos like this one:
I gotta tell you, for a moment, it felt like we were in full glare. And I think that if I had my camera ready at that instant when the angles all conspired to illuminate our aircraft, all I would have gotten was a screen of white, much like this one taken by Sandia Labs during a study:
![ivanpah-glare-7-17-14-thumb-600x395-77670[1]](http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/ivanpah-glare-7-17-14-thumb-600x395-776701.png?resize=507%2C334&quality=75)
Interestingly, the Sandia National Laboratory is developing a 3D mapping tool to help predict glare from this thing, as seen below:
They purposely flew into the glare and report:
The Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System (ISEGS) consists of three 459-ft-tall power towers and over 170,000 reflective heliostats with a rated capacity of 390 MW. The California Energy Commission (CEC) has received numerous pilot and air traffic controller glare-impact reports. The situation is serious because pilots report that they cannot “scan the sky in that direction to look for other aircraft.” According to an air traffic controller, “Daily, during the late-morning and early-afternoon hours, we get complaints from pilots of aircraft flying from the northeast to the southwest about the brightness of this solar farm.”
Some Ivanpah heliostats are moved to standby mode in which they reflect light to the side of the tower to reduce sunlight being pointed at the tower’s receivers. Aerial and ground-based surveys of the glare were conducted in April, 2014, to identify the cause and to quantify the irradiance and potential ocular impacts of the glare.
Sandia’s report concluded the glare from those standby heliostats could cause “significant ocular impact” at a distance of six miles. Ivanpah operators BrightSource and NRG are investigating new strategies and algorithms for heliostat standby positions to reduce the irradiance and number of heliostats that can reflect light to an aerial observer, and pilots have been warned of the issue.
Source: http://energy.sandia.gov/?p=19782
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![3D-glare-tool-1[1]](http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/3d-glare-tool-11.jpg?resize=640%2C368&quality=83)
![Ivanpah-glare-photo[1]](http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/ivanpah-glare-photo1.jpg?resize=640%2C342&quality=83)
300,000 computer controlled mirrors? So thats 600,000 motors to allow full tracking of the sun. That’s a lot of copper, steel, magnets, brass, eletronics etc etc…
They should add wind turbines around the edges to prevent birds from being fried by the concentrated solar reflections … much more humane … /sarc
Perhaps The Ohio State University could get a grant to determine what is burning all of those birds. The expertise and experience they gained on their study of the effects of dried-out streams and rivers on fish should make them prime candidates to win such a grant.
There’s a trade off with EVERY energy source. Nothing has surpassed petroleum for cost and availability yet. The Ivanpah site does look other worldly from the highway when you pass it.
The ends justify the means
I also was startled by seeing intense glare from the Ivanpah solar plant on a flight to the ICCC conference in Vegas, even though the plane was flying at least 30 miles away I’d estimate from the mirrors. Why didn’t anyone think of the risks to aviation & wildlife before this $2.2 billion plant was built?
Published yesterday in the Contra Costa Times:
Emerging solar plants scorch birds in mid-air
http://www.contracostatimes.com/environment/ci_26355983/emerging-solar-plants-scorch-birds-mid-air
“Federal wildlife investigators who visited the BrightSource Energy plant last year and watched as birds burned and fell, reporting an average of one “streamer” every two minutes, are urging California officials to halt the operator’s application to build a still-bigger version.
The investigators want the halt until the full extent of the deaths can be assessed. Estimates per year now range from a low of about a thousand by BrightSource to 28,000 by an expert for the Center for Biological Diversity environmental group.
The deaths are “alarming. It’s hard to say whether that’s the location or the technology,” said Garry George, renewable-energy director for the California chapter of the Audubon Society. “There needs to be some caution.”
Funny, that 140,000 homes number.
Seems like that is assuming 100% power at 100% maximum solar energy delivered (at 1 hour per day) and under completely clear skies. Pick a different day, you get a lower solar elevation angle, you get less power. Pick a different hour of the day, you get a lower solar elevation angle, and you get less power. Pick any day with cloud cover, you get less power.
We can build a 650 MegaWatt gas turbine power plant on 10 acres under one roof.
And run it 24 hours per day 365 days per year.
I have an idea. One could use an alternative source of energy. The source could be a combustible material such as coal, gas, or oil. The energy produced by combustion could be contained in a vessel. A coil of tubes with water being pumped through them could be in the vessel to transfer the heat to the water and the water converted to steam, which could then drive the turbines which would drive the electrical generators.. That way, the energy would all be contained in a vessel, pipes, and tubes so as not to injure people or animals.
One of the best (probably the best) sources for coverage of Ivanpah is from Chris Clarke of KCET. check out http://www.kcet.org/cgi-bin/mt/mt-search.cgi?tag=ivanpah+segs&limit=20 and provide the links to your favorites or most informative.
So why the reflection to begin with?
That is a bunch of energy escaping that could be redirected.
Just sayin, that energy could certainly generate localized heat. Isn’t that what the whole thing is supposed to do efficiently?
You sure this isn’t just Spontaneous Avian Combustion?
Why haven’t bright source updated their bird death estimate? If they are seeing a streamer every 2 mins (probably more as its a big area) thats 150 birds a day over the 5hr operational period, 37500 birds a year if they run 250 days as some estimates suggest.
Surely this warrants investigation by the EPA as their bird death estimate is fraudulently low 2.7% of estimate calculated from actual data.
Hockey Schtick says:
August 18, 2014 at 7:51 pm
Gosh, that reads just like the AP story quoted in the main post. 🙂
Where were the modelers, who could have predicted these dangerous visual effects? Or, perhaps their files been lost?
“Hockey Schtick says:
August 18, 2014 at 7:51 pm”
I have a mate who works for the New Zealand Govn’t in negotiating air routes. He jokes that there was a plan to install a new safety device in the cockpit on aircraft. It was a pitbull terrier to keep the pilots away from the controls. But seriously, once auto pilot is engaged…
Here’s a quote from a current alarmist CBC news item:
This is supposed to be demonstrating the horrors and horrific nature of the oil industry.
To REALLY slaughter birds in quantity takes environmentalists, and alternative energy sources.
They can’t feel shame. They don’t know what that even means.
Dead birds are a sign of green energy. All to save us from the created issue of global warming. With the Obama administration handing out the tax credits imagine how many dead birds we can pile up.
Average one bird every two minutes, that’s 30 per hour, times what, 10 hours per day of enough sun to do this. That’s 300 birds per day. Simple arithmetic gets this to 109,500 birds per year. So either the estimates by the operators and enviros are completely wrong, or the 2 minute estimate is way off. I wonder which it is?
If we could get more people involved with the feral cat population situation we could offset the flaming bird and wind turbine issue
Problem solved ;0)
If evil petroleum companies were doing this to birds, there would already be a sequel to “Silent Spring” at the publishers.
Well all it needs is a private plane to go down, eh. Luckily two planned solar farms in NSW have quit because of the uncertainty of the market.
I’ve been through the glare field of a smaller prototype of those things back in the 90’s, and they really are a hazard to flight. They light up the cockpit like an arc light, and you can’t look in that direction until you get past the mirrors.
Kinda hard on birds, too, but hey, as we used to say in the Air Force, you gotta expect losses in a big operation.
CSP will never be competitive, dead birds now withstanding.
This is what happens when your nuclear plants hit their design life limits.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/18/us-europe-nuclear-power-insight-idUSKBN0GH05U20140818
Looks like there are going to be a lot of new coal fired power plants coming online in a few years.
Of course if you don’t want to wait 10 years to build a couple of 1 GW reactors you might try building a few coal fired base load plants and install a few gigawatts of solar in 6-14 months.
Solar Boom Drives First Global Panel Shortage Since 2006.
http://www.newsmax.com/Finance/solar-boom-panel-shortage/2014/08/18/id/589506/
All the above is applies only to non US electrical production. The US solar market will hit the wall in 2016 when the 30% tax credit expires. No way solar can compete without those tax credits.
Google sells us out for profit and kills birds for fun.
@ur momisugly John says:
August 18, 2014 at 8:26 pm
I have cats as pets, but your idea made me think of using cats as targets for the mirrors to scare away birds like feline scare crows streaking through the sky. A new version of “101 Uses For a Dead Cat”.
http://www.amazon.com/101-Uses-Dead-Simon-Bond/dp/0517545160/ref=pd_rhf_dp_s_cp_2_GACF?ie=UTF8&refRID=0PJYFWJPFD8TZQG4AK6S
Those birds probably aren’t just sparrows–they may include a considerable number of raptors.