Aqua Pennsylvania, Inc. (Aqua) managers were joined today by elected
officials and environmental leaders to celebrate the start of
construction of a 1.1 megawatt photovoltaic solar farm at Aqua’s
Ingram’s Mill Water Treatment Plant in East Bradford Township, which
serves drinking water to the West Chester, Pennsylvania area.
The renewable energy project will use high-efficiency panels to convert
sunlight into useful power, thereby reducing the region’s power
generation requirements. The $6 million project is being partially
funded with a $1 million grant through the federal stimulus program,
which is administered through the Pennsylvania Energy Development
Authority (PEDA). Once completed, the 4.5-acre farm will be among the
second largest solar installations on the East Coast. Among the benefits
of the new facility will be that it:
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offsets the need for 3,000 barrels of oil each year;
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avoids the equivalent of 2.6 million car miles each year; and
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reduces CO2 emissions by 1.4 million pounds each year.
"We are very proud to employ cutting-edge green energy technology to
support our ability to provide one of the world’s most valuable
resources — drinking water,” said Aqua Chairman and CEO Nicholas
DeBenedictis. "Our business was created out of concern for the
environment and public health, so it makes perfect sense to have a
sustainable clean energy source to power our water treatment plant. This
project will not only benefit the 25,000 West Chester area residents who
Aqua serves, but a multitude of others who live in the area and will
benefit from the environmentally friendly features of this facility.”
"This project will return great economic and environmental dividends to
Pennsylvania and increase the state’s energy diversity,” DeBenedictis
said. "Aqua is proud to be a part of this cutting-edge technology, and
we hope our project will encourage growth within the solar sector of the
energy market to reduce the nation’s carbon footprint.”
The 1.1 MW solar farm, to be constructed by the Conergy Group, will
provide a direct benefit to the water treatment plant by providing
renewable energy where the energy is most needed. The solar farm will
reduce Aqua’s grid-tied usage by 1.3 million kWh annually resulting in a
direct economic benefit of $77,000 per year in energy savings. In
addition, the project will alleviate congestion on the PJM grid
resulting in additional savings to all consumers by reducing line losses
and congestion charges.
The project will also include a research project, "Identifying and
Assessing Native Ground Cover Species to Populate Areas Beneath and
Around Large Scale Solar Photovoltaic Arrays.” Restoration ecologists
and wildlife and plant biologists from Delaware and Chester County
universities will study or conduct research to assess the most
advantageous native plant species to populate areas beneath and around
ground-mounted solar photovoltaic arrays to be built at the solar farm.
The research will commence when the solar arrays are complete and ground
restoration is completed.
WTRG