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Duke seeks bids on $100M N Carolina solar power plan

NEW YORK
Thu Sep 4, 2008 11:30am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Duke Energy Corp's Carolinas unit is seeking bids from solar power companies to supply solar panels, electrical equipment and installation services for the utility's proposed $100 million North Carolina solar plan, the company said in a release Thursday.

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Starting in 2009, Duke wants to install photovoltaic solar panels at up to 850 North Carolina sites, including homes, schools, office buildings, shopping malls, warehouses and large manufacturing facilities -- both on roofs and on the ground.

Electricity generated through the program would total at least 16 megawatts -- enough to power 2,600 homes.

The solar proposal, first announced in June, requires approval by the North Carolina Utilities Commission before the company can implement it as the costs would become part of the rate base.

Duke, of Charlotte, North Carolina, currently gets less than 1 percent of the power it sells customers in its five-state region from renewable sources. The company's fuel mix is about 71 percent coal, 27 percent nuclear and 2 percent other (natural gas and hydro), a Duke spokesman said.

Duke owns about 39,000 MW of generating capacity in North America and Latin America and serves about 4 million customers in North and South Carolina, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky.

The spokesman said that by 2030 the company wants to change its fuel mix to 38 percent nuclear, 33 percent coal, 11 percent renewable, 12 percent energy efficiency and 6 percent other.

Duke, through its so-called "save-a-watt" program, sees energy efficiency as a fuel. The company has proposed and state utility regulators are considering the program, which would compensate Duke for efficiency investments.

SOLAR PROPOSAL

Duke would own and, through contractors, install and maintain the solar panels. The utility also would own the electricity generated, which would be sent to the electrical grid that serves all customers.

The company would compensate homeowners, businesses and other entities that offer their roofs or land for the program, based on the size of the installation and amount of electricity generated at any given location.

To date, the number of solar panels in North Carolina is small (about 60 in Duke's Carolinas service area) because they are very expensive -- about $30,000 for a three kilowatt system before federal, state and local incentives.

Duke will begin installations in early 2009, contingent on regulatory approval. The company proposes to complete all installations by late 2010.

Each installation is expected to have a useful life of 20 to 25 years.

The solar program will help Duke meet North Carolina's renewable portfolio standard, which requires 12.5 percent of customers' power needs come from renewable power or energy efficiency by 2021.

Duke expects to meet the standard through a portfolio of different renewable and efficiency options.

(Reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by Walter Bagley)



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