(BCN) — There are 12 acres of new, sun-hungry hardware just off Bear Creek Road in Orinda, not uncoincidentally, across the road from a PG&E substation below Briones Reservoir. Only this new facility — acres of new shiny solar panels absorbing sunlight — is an East Bay Municipal Utility District project. Turns out they need power to move water to about 1.
4 million customers and have decided solar power is the way to do much of it. EBMUD on Thursday unveiled the Orinda Photovoltaic Solar Energy Project (Orinda PV), a spread full of more than 12,000 solar panels that can produce 10 million kilowatt-hours of clean, renewable energy per year, offsetting nearly 10 percent of EBMUD’s energy costs. The project will go online this fall and instead of plugging all that new clean energy into EBMUD facilities, it goes into PG&E’s grid, with PG&E crediting EBMUD for the energy it contributes to its overall energy supply.
The five-year project is part of EBMUD’s decision to move its goal to being totally carbon neutral by 2030, a decade earlier than its previous goal. “We cannot be successful in our mission without protecting the environment, which means carefully managing our natural resources,” said EBMUD general manager Clifford Chan during a ceremony at the plant Thursday morning. “And while we’re making significant investments in our infrastructure, we also have to invest in sustainability.
And this renewable energy project is a key part of our strategy.” Chan s.