Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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Solar Savings
Potato
operation going green to reduce its power bills
By SARA HOTTMAN, Herald
and News 4/21/11
H&N photo by Sara
Hottman Gold Dust Potato Processors in Malin is
installing solar panels
in hopes of reducing its power bills. A state program
designed to help power
customers use solar energy is paying some of the costs of
installation.
But they could cut the
operation’s power bills nearly in half, an attractive
prospect to an industry facing higher power rates and a
higher probability of groundwater pumping because of water
regulations.
The panels cost about $5
per kilowatt hour — a cumulative $750,000 — to install, and
each irrigation pump solar panel costs about $5.30 per kWh,
about $74,200.
Together, the operation’s solar panels will produce about 330,000 kWh annually, which a cost-benefit analysis showed will make the initial investment worth the cost.
“It helps us a little
with our bills, and helps us move toward being a greener
farming system,” said Lexi Crawford, business manager for
Gold Dust Potato Processors, which primarily grows chipping
potatoes used for processed foods like potato chips.
Incentive program
The
operation took advantage of the Oregon Feed-in Tariff
program, which reimbursed one-third of installation
costs. Through the program, Pacific Power will pay the
operation a monthly rate for the solar power it
produces. That money will go toward paying off
installation costs.
During
the surface water shortage last year, many farmers
turned to groundwater to water their acreage, running up
thousands of dollars in electricity bills. Gold Dust
pumped groundwater for its fields as well as for the
general irrigation system in the Malin-Merrill area,
Crawford said.
After installing a 10
kilowatt solar panel at one irrigation pump, its bill for 15
days was a credit of almost $200. When the operation starts
pumping in May or June, that electricity credit will be put
toward its bill.
Crawford has two large
binders of invoices and another filing drawer of information
documenting power costs from the processing shed, offices
and irrigation pumps. The processing shed and office use
about 350,000 kWh annually, and irrigation pumps can run up
140,000 kWh to 240,000 kWh each year.
The large solar panels
will generate about 150,000 kWh of electricity annually and
each irrigation solar panel will generate about 14,000 kWh,
all of which will appear as credit on the Pacific Power
bill.
When irrigation pumps
are off, the solar panels are still converting sunlight to
power for that credit, helping the environment and Gold
Dust’s bottom line, Crawford said.
Side Bars
Oregon
Feed-in Tariff The Oregon Feed-in Tariff program was established to offer incentives to businesses and individuals to set up environmentally friendly solar power systems. Customers with Pacific Power, Idaho Power and Portland General Electric are entitled to the program, which gives payments to customers for generating power through solar power.
The program is a pilot
until 2014. Visit the Oregon Public Utility Commission
website,
Client requires
sustainable practices Frito-Lay is one of Gold Dust Potato Processors’ biggest clients, and it demands its potato growers conform to its sustainable business practices movement, said Tricia Walker Hill, corporate counsel for Gold Dust.
“They told us farmers
that don’t look to take care of the land … are gone,” she
said. While the agricultural industry and environmental groups are often at odds, farmers have long said the reality is agriculture nurtures the environment because business depends on it. Balin Farms used incentive programs to install solar panels last year. Environmentally sound farming practices are linked with quality products, Hill said. They also help save on electricity and chemical costs, and right now are probably pre-empting coming government regulations. “We support wildlife habitat restoration … we’re testing to use less chemicals, looking at soil and runoff,” Hill said. “We’re taking steps to be sustainable.” |
Page Updated: Sunday April 24, 2011 02:55 AM Pacific
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