Solar One/Solar Two – Daggett, California, USA
Solar One was the first test of a large-scale thermal solar power tower plant in the world. In 1995 Solar One was converted into Solar Two, by adding another ring of mirrors surrounding the tower. Solar One/Two is located in Daggett, CA, about 10 miles east of Barstow. Solar Two was decommissioned in 1999, and was converted by theUniversity of California, Davis, into a telescope. Solar One/Two and other nearby solar projects are plainly visible via satellite imaging software at
Hydroelectric Plant – Enloe, Washington, USA
While some might argue that hydroelectric because dams have a negative impact on fish and wildlife, riparian habitats, stream flows, etc. In the Pacific Northwest in particular, many of the smaller dams and hydroelectric plants are being decommissioned to, among other things, improve salmon access to spawning grounds.
Carrizo Plain Solar Power Plant – Southern, California, USA
At its prime, the Carrizo Plain was by far the largest photovoltaic array in the world, with 100,000 1′x 4′ photovoltaic arrays generating 5.2 megawatts at its peak. The plant was originally constructed by ARCO in 1983 and was dismantled in the late 1990s. The used panels are still being resold throughout the world.
Built by Nikola Tesla and George Westinghouse in 1896, the Adams hydro station was the first large-scale, alternating current electric generating plant in the world. The plant was also the first to transmit large-scale power a long distance when it brought electricity to Buffalo, New York, 20 miles away.
Tehachapi Wind Farms – Southern California, USA
There are dozens of wind farms scattered around the Western rim of the Mojave Desert near Tehachapi pass. There are over 5,000 wind turbines in the area thanks to the wind rush of the 1970s and 1980s.
Many companies have come and gone, been bought, or gone belly-up. Some of the hundreds of turbines not spinning have been derelict now for decades. There is no law in Kern County that requires removal of broken or abandoned wind turbines, and as a result, the Tehachapi Pass area is an eerie mix of healthy, active wind farms and a wind turbine graveyard/junkyard.
White River Falls Hydroelectric – Oregon, USA
In the early 1900’s, farmers living in the local area put the White River Falls to creative use when they established a water-powered grist mill at the falls. Soon thereafter, the grist mill was upgraded to ahydroelectric plant which provided power until the 1950s when it was decommissioned.
Kamaoa Wind Farm – South Point, Hawaii, USA
Built in 1986, the Kamaoa wind farm at South Point on the southern tip of the island of Hawaii stopped producing energy for the Big Island’s grid in the last ten years. The 37 battered and beaten Mitsubishi 250 kw turbines essentially went dormant and were recently replaced by fourteen new 1.5 mw at the Pakini Nui wind farm
Hydroelectric Canal and Plant – Cesena, Italy
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