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Labor Unions and Construction Company Reach Agreement to Build Solar Thermal Facility

Bechtel Construction Company and two labor organizations today announced an agreement for the construction of BrightSource Energy’s Ivanpah Solar Electricity Generating System, a 440-megawatt power facility in southeastern .

Under the Project Labor Agreement (PLA), the State Building and Construction Trades Council of (SBCTC), and the Building & Construction Trades Council of San Bernardino and Riverside Counties will provide qualified, skilled craft workers to BrightSource’s Ivanpah project, and will provide fair wages, fringe benefits, and working conditions for all craft workers.

Robert Balgenorth, president of the SBCTC, said;

“This project is a great example of how the new green technology is now providing real jobs for thousands of workers. This PLA ensures that the jobs will provide good wages and benefits for workers, who will provide the highest quality of work, resulting in new, cleaner energy for generations to come.”

“This agreement reflects our positive relationship with Construction Company and reinforces our continuing support for this innovative project and the jobs it will generate,” said William Perez, executive secretary and business manager for the San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, Building and Construction Trades Council. “The PLA provides the framework under which our members will work on the job site. We are committed to completing this construction job on schedule, within budget and safely.”

BrightSource’s Ivanpah facility, comprising three power plants, is scheduled to begin construction in 2010 following final permitting by the Energy Commission and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. The project will result in approximately 1,000 jobs at the peak of construction, with total construction wages of approximately $250 million.

“This is a significant agreement,” said Ian Copeland, president of Renewables and New Technology. “It not only benefits labor and , it benefits the entire renewable energy industry as it grows to meet the increasing demand for clean energy. The success of this agreement will point the way for the construction of future renewable energy projects.”

BrightSource’s Ivanpah plants will produce enough clean energy to power 150,000 homes and displace more than 450,000 tons (408,000 metric tonnes) of CO2 annually, which is the equivalent of taking more than 75,000 cars off the road. The power generated from these solar plants will be sold under separate contracts BrightSource Energy established with Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) and Southern Edison (SCE).

“We’re pleased that and labor unions have been able to conclude the PLA for our Ivanpah project, which will provide a significant boost to the High Desert region’s economic development activities,” said John Woolard, CEO and president of BrightSource Energy. “Ivanpah will be a model clean energy project, setting the bar with its highly-efficient technology and environmentally-responsible design. We look forward to and the unions delivering our project in a timely, cost-effective, high quality manner, with an exemplary safety culture.”


The Ivanpah facility will utilize BrightSource Energy’s proven Luz Power Tower 550 technology (LPT 550). The system produces electricity the same way as traditional power plants – by creating high temperature steam to turn a turbine. However, instead of using fossil fuels or nuclear power to create the steam, BrightSource uses thousands of mirrors called heliostats to reflect sunlight onto a boiler filled with water that sits atop a tower. When the sunlight hits the boiler, the water inside is heated and creates high temperature steam. The steam is then piped to a conventional tur¬bine which generates electricity. This fully integrated system takes advantage of high operating efficiencies and low capital costs to provide reliable and low-cost carbon-free energy.

The system is also designed to minimize the solar plant’s environmental impact, reducing the need for extensive land grading and concrete pads. In order to conserve precious desert water, the LPT 550 system uses air-cooling to convert the steam back into water, resulting in a 90 percent reduction in water usage compared to conventional wet-cooling. The water is then returned to the boiler in an environmentally friendly closed system. Ivanpah will use approximately 100 acre feet of water – the equivalent of 300 homes worth of annual water use and 25 times less water than used by competing technologies that employ wet-cooling.

Today the company’s LPT 550 solar system is employed at the Solar Energy Development Center (SEDC) in Israel’s Negev Desert. Operating over the past year, the SEDC is producing the world’s highest temperature turbine quality steam from solar energy.

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is one of the world’s premier engineering, construction, and project management companies. Since its founding in 1898, has worked on more than 22,000 projects in 140 countries on all seven continents. For well over half a century, has been a leader in designing, building, and modernizing power plants and advancing innovative power generation technologies. is the largest employer of union construction labor in the United States. Today, ’s 44,000 employees are teamed with customers, partners, and suppliers on hundreds of projects in nearly 50 countries.

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