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New Belgium Brewing Announces On-Site Solar Array
| Quelle: New Belgium Brewing
FORT COLLINS, CO--(Marketwire - August 21, 2009) - New Belgium Brewing, makers of Fat Tire
Amber Ale, announced today that they will begin installation of the largest
privately owned solar array in Colorado on August 25. The 200 kW system
will produce 16% of New Belgium's peak electrical load and 3% of their
total electrical energy use. The array is part of the brewer's commitment
to Fort Collins' FortZED initiative. Fort ZED is a public/private
partnership that aims to create the world's largest "active zero energy
district" through Smart Grid and renewable energy technology.
New Belgium, along with several other Fort Collins entities -- such as the
City, CSU, Spirae, Brendle Group, Advanced Energy, and Woodward --
responded to a request from the Department of Energy to demonstrate peak
load reduction. The partners were one of nine groups nationwide to receive
such a grant and see it as an excellent opportunity to jump start FortZED.
"We're excited to include a fairly large solar PV installation as part of
our total load reduction project portfolio," said New Belgium
Sustainability Director Jennifer Orgolini. "It nicely compliments our
current on-site generation which uses methane from our process water
treatment plant, and the new generation capacity, thermal storage and
demand response technologies we'll also be adding for peak reduction. The
five projects we're doing to reduce peak will cost over $3 million, but the
DOE grant and partner contributions allow us to help further research
required to make distributed generation and smart grids a reality for the
whole country."
New Belgium became the country's first brewery to subscribe to 100% wind
powered electricity in 1998 and can produce up to 15% of its electrical
needs by capturing methane from its process water treatment plant to fire a
co-generation engine which produces heat and electricity on site.
The solar array will cost just over $1 million, and New Belgium will
receive reimbursement for up to 40% through the Department of Energy grant.
Boulder-based Namaste Solar is contracted for the integration. The 870
panels will rest atop New Belgium's packaging hall where engineers estimate
it can power the bottle line up to eight hours on a sunny day.