The new Timna Solar Park
Allocation of the land for the Timna Solar Park has already been approved by the Israel Lands Authority, and the tender for the project is scheduled to be published on October 19, available to bidders worldwide. As part of the bidding process, all qualified bidders will receive detailed maps of the region and a completed environmental impact assessment, and will then be required to submit proposals to the National Council Planning and Building.
"It's going to be a first in hopefully a series of 170 megawatts in that zone, by 2020," said Davidovich-Banet, who also serves as the chairwoman for the upcoming Eilat-Eilot Green Energy Conference in December.
The 50 megawatts planned for this first stage, however, will still be enough to ensure that the entire Eilat-Eilot area is powered by solar energy, Davidovich-Banet stressed. Today, the region already has about 65 megawatts installed, which will then be followed by a 40-megawatt field being built by Arava Power Company at Kibbutz Ketura as well as the soon-to-be tendered Timna Solar Park, she said. At peak hours, the Eilat and Arava region collectively consumes about 150 megawatts, according to Davidovich-Banet. "We want to produce even more and shift it to nighttime storage," she said.
While all electricity generated by solar means in the region does technically feed to the national grid, the Israel Electric Corporation ensures that this electricity serves that region directly, rather than transmitting more electricity from Ashkelon, Davidovich-Banet explained. Only when the area needs additional power does the IEC divert electricity from Ashkelon there, she said.
As far as nighttime storage is concerned, Davidovich-Banet said that technologies are constantly being developed, and she expects to have an "advanced beta site" of 10 megawatts worth of storage in Timna by 2015. Already, a 1.5-megawatt beta storage facility is being tested at the Rotem site in Dimona, she added. "We are hoping that the region will reach 100 percent energy independence daytime and nighttime, and at the same have time power stations and many mechanisms for storage," Davidovich-Banet said. "This is our mission."
Sharon Udasin