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Hanwha Q CELLS completes United States' first solar farm on a 'Superfund' site

10.86 MW utility-scale solar farm was fully realized without any incentives.

The 10.86MWdc Maywood Solar Farm, located on 43 acres of the Reilly Tar & Chemical Superfund site in Indianapolis, was completed under the 2012 Indianapolis Power & Light (IPL) Rate-REP program using conventional solar project financing. Construction commenced in July 2013 and was completed in March 2014, using high efficiency Q CELLS Q.PRO L polycrystalline modules, engineered by Hanwha Q CELLS in Germany.

According to Hanwha, the Maywood Solar Farm will operate for up to 30 years and reduce CO2 emissions by more than 13,000 metric tons per year -- an amount equivalent to the annual carbon emissions of more than 2,700 passenger cars or 1,800 Indiana residential homes.

"The completion of the Maywood Superfund project is a significant milestone for Hanwha Q CELLS, but also for the solar industry as a whole in overcoming the legal, financial, regulatory and construction hurdles to create a virtuous cycle, and develop a higher use for brownfield, idle land," said Charles Kim, Hanwha Q CELLS' CEO. "In completing a non-subsidized Superfund project, Hanwha Q CELLS has broken a barrier that has frustrated solar project developers for more than 20 years. We are looking forward to future, similar projects."

Safeguarding project economics, Hanwha Q CELLS completed project construction at, or below, market costs - while managing additional site and environmental requirements. Hanwha Q CELLS employed an internally developed and adaptive construction methodology in concert with US EPA to meet existing site environmental covenants. The proprietary Hanwha Q CELLS Soil Disturbance Minimization Plan resulted in a volume reduction of site soil movement of more than 93% over conventional construction approaches, while also minimizing the potential for exposing known underground hazards, impairing the existing site environmental remedy, or creating human exposure to site hazards.

Susan Hedman, US EPA Regional Administrator, said: "This innovative solar project demonstrates that Superfund sites can be redeveloped -- to generate economic benefits for the local community and clean renewable energy for homes and businesses. US EPA is proud to have played a role in the Maywood Solar Farm project, which has transformed a site with a long history of contamination into a source of renewable energy for the future."
 

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Energy efficiency  •  Energy infrastructure  •  Photovoltaics (PV)  •  Policy, investment and markets  •  Solar electricity