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Alaska covers fewer kids with public insurance vs. 2019; Judge Cannon indefinitely postpones Trump's classified docs trial; Federal initiative empowers communities with career creation; Ohio teacher salaries haven't kept pace with inflation.

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Former Speaker Paul Ryan weighs in on the 2024 Presidential election. President Biden condemns anti-semitism. And the House calls more college and university presidents to testify on handling pro-Palestine protests.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Bright Future Seen as Feds Approve Pair of Utility-Size Arizona Solar Sites

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Thursday, July 26, 2012   

PHOENIX, Ariz. - The U.S. Interior Department has approved a final plan to fast-track utility-size solar power plants at a pair of locations west of Phoenix. Greater Phoenix Economic Council President Barry Broome says solar gives Arizona the potential to solve its long-term economic issues by exporting clean energy to the Mountain West.

"Arizona's going to double its electrical needs in the next 20 to 25 years. So, all of the power infrastructure we need, we need for ourselves. But if we get good enough at putting power in, eventually power and solar renewable energy can be a product we export."

At full build-out, the two newly-approved sites could power more than 165,000 homes. The Interior Department approved 15 other sites in five other Southwestern states. Arizona has dozens of other solar plant sites on state and private lands.

Broome says the Arizona sites meet two essential requirements for large solar plants.

"You know, you gotta have wide open spaces because these are large-scale sites, but at the same time you gotta have access to the grid for the ability to deliver and transmit power. Those two sites have both."

The biggest drawback to solar power has always been that the price was higher than coal or natural gas, but Broome says solar power now costs only half of what it did just a few years ago.

"If you look at the trajectory of solar power prices, and if you look at the trajectory of traditional carbon energy prices, they intersect within five years - without government support and subsidy."

Broome says solar renewable energy gives Arizona and the entire United States the best opportunity to dominate new technology since the telecom, digital and life sciences boom of the mid-1990s. Arizona is currently home to nearly 5,000 solar-related jobs.



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