Alaska's Largest Rural Solar Project Nears Completion in Kotzebue

Alaska's Largest Rural Solar Project Nears Completion in Kotzebue

Kotzebue, around 30 miles above the Arctic Circle, is home to the stateā€™s second-largest solar panel installation.

's 576-kilowatt project began in May, and a locally hired crew has since clocked in ten-hour days, six days a week. They hauled 1,440 400-watt solar panels across uneven tundra and installed the final panel on June 18.

ā€œThe solar panels are even generating power through midnight and 1 a.m.,ā€ says KEAā€™s Matt Bergan. ā€œThere are no moving parts, they are just pushing electrons.ā€

The location of the solar farm was strategic. KEA removed eight old 66 kilowatt AOC wind turbines and installed the same power rating in solar panels.

ā€œOver a year, the wind turbines would likely produce twice the amount of energy as the solar panels, but solar requires far less maintenance,ā€ adds Bergan.

KEA plans to install another 500 kW of solar panels in the coming years.

The project was funded mostly locally by the Northwest Arctic Boroughā€™s village improvement funds, Kotzebue Electric Association capital funds, and U.S. Department of Energy tribal energy funds.

The contractor was , led by Edwin Bifelt from Huslia.

The largest project in the state is still Renewable IPPā€™s Willow Solar Farm in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough.

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Locally hired laborers wire solar panels. (Photo by Tiffany Creed, KOTZ ā€“ Kotzebue)