Solar energy growing in Indiantown should be first step to more green power
Thursday, October 15th, 2009 by TCPalm.comINDIANTOWN — Beyond the taqueria and past the cattle ranches here, more than 700 workers are busy building the largest solar-power plant in Florida.
They’re assembling giant aluminum frames that stretch 40 feet long and weigh 2,800 pounds apiece.
When the frames are finished, they will fit them with 192,000 mirrors.
And, eventually, they will attach steel pipes to hold liquid that the sun will heat to 700 degrees Fahrenheit.
To see the scene at Florida Power & Light Co.’s solar-thermal plant in western Martin County is to think that a new era of clean energy has finally dawned in the Sunshine State.
But not so fast.
Despite lots of talk about the need to be green, state lawmakers dragged their feet on proposed legislation this year. They never managed to pass a renewable-energy bill.
FPL says it has more solar projects ready to go — but it can’t build them until the state approves a law allowing it to recover the costs of construction. (more…)

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