Keystone Potato Products looking at solar photovoltaic to cut electricity costs

 Keystone Potato Products
三月 02, 2010

Keith Masser, a seventh generation potato farmer, is no dummy. A graduate of Penn State with a Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Engineering, Masser always has his eye on the bottom line. This includes not only the best, most productive, and most wholesome ways to grow the humble but essential potato, but ways to get it to market, in all its myriad forms, at a cost that remains competitive with other potato producers.

For Masser, who is both president of Keystone Potato Products and president/CEO of Sterman Masser Inc., the parent company, the most recent effort to stay ahead of the curve involves installing solar photovoltaic panels to cut electricity costs for his Sacramento, Pennsylvania-based factory.

The project is doable thanks to a $1 million grant from the Commonwealth Financing Authority, or CFA (also known as the Pennsylvania Financing Authority), which was established as an independent agency to administer Pennsylvania’s allocations under the economic stimulus package, as funded through ARRA (the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009).

For this western Schuykill County potato grower/processor, the grant will go a long way toward installing what is anticipated to cost in excess of $5 million, but will in the long run save Masser and his company a bucketful of cash, given the fact that Allentown-based regional electric utility PPL Electric will be raising its rates 30 percent in 2010 due to the removal of rate caps on electric prices by the Pennsylvania Public Utilities Commission.

The solar farm will go on 80 acres of farmland, on a sloping hill just off Fearnot Road, with the large, black solar panels making an interesting visual addition to what is otherwise a field of two-foot tall potato plants.

The solar field, which can accommodate about 159,000 solar panels, for a total output of about 11 megawatts (or enough to power about 1,400 homes), will likely end up about the same size as the Wyandot Solar Project in Ohio – which on completion this summer will be the largest in the state, and possibly in the Midwest.

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