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Swift Current Energy’s 260 MW Tres Bahias Solar project located on Texas’ Gulf Coast is now powering City of Houston facilities through a PPA with an affiliate of NRG Energy.

UnitedHealth Group and Morgan Stanley Renewables are providing the tax equity for the project. ING Capital previously provided construction financing, with Siemens Financial Services and Associated Bank as additional lenders in the construction financing.

“We are excited that Tres Bahias is now contributing pollution-free energy to the City of Houston’s facilities,” says Eric Lammers, CEO and co-founder of Swift Current Energy.

“Swift Current continues to grow our operating portfolio, and we’re pleased to be able to supply power to the City of Chicago through our Double Black Diamond project and now to the City of Houston through Tres Bahias. We are grateful for the commitment of Morgan Stanley Renewables, UnitedHealth Group, NRG Energy and the City of Houston on this project.”

First Solar supplied the modules for the project, with Array Technologies providing the trackers. IEA Constructors managed project construction.

Vinson & Elkins and Husch Blackwell represented Swift Current in the transaction. Willkie Farr & Gallagher and Jackson Walker represented Morgan Stanley Renewables. Sidley Austin represented NRG Energy.

The post Swift Current, NRG Sign PPA for Texas Tres Bahias Solar Project appeared first on Solar Industry.

Swift Current, NRG Sign PPA for Texas Tres Bahias Solar Project

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Renewable Energy

Democracy v. Constitutional Republic

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I wish I had $100 for every time I heard some uneducated Trump supporter tell me this.

A democracy is a system where governmental power is derived directly from the will of the majority. A constitutional republic is a specific type of representative democracy where the people elect officials to govern, but those officials are strictly limited by a supreme, written constitution designed to protect minority rights from majority rule.

I remember a conservative friend who lived in Hawaii who complained that the native people objected to a project directed from Washington to build something at the top of one of their volcanoes, on the basis that this was their holy land.  My friend asked, “Doesn’t the majority rule?”

“Not necessarily.” Trying to make my point in the simplest way possible, I explained, “People have rights. My neighbors like me, but imagine that they didn’t, and 20 of them, a 20:1 majority, wanted to come in here and beat me to death. I have a right not to murdered. When you think about it, we’re lucky not to live in a country where ‘the majority rules.’”

“Oh. I guess you’re right,” my friend said.

Democracy v. Constitutional Republic

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Renewable Energy

Why Trump Is So Repugnant

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My biggest beef with Trump isn’t the many individual points of failure, but the fact that they are all the product of the mind of a criminal sociopath whose only way of thinking is self-enrichment, normally at the expense of anyone who cannot serve to make him richer and more powerful.

Why Trump Is So Repugnant

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Renewable Energy

Scientific Illiteracy

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Neil DeGrasse Tyson says that our problem isn’t that our children don’t understand science, but that our adults don’t.

Three comments:

1) Wind is not a finite resource as long as the sun comes up every morning and disproportionately heats the Earth’s surface.  8th grade Earth science.

2) Wind doesn’t cool anything except the skins of certain animals that perspire. 9th grade biology.

3) Putting one’s ignorance of public display is not a strong idea, even in rural Texas.

Scientific Illiteracy

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