Florida
Battery storage necessary for solar power expansion in Florida
PARRISH, Fla. – A key to the way forward for Florida’s electrical grid is a tool that might be confused for a pc server.
This equipment is definitely a battery module. By themselves, every of the elements is as highly effective as 2,000 iPhone batteries. However collectively, as a group of tens of hundreds of modules, they make up what’s the world’s largest photo voltaic battery storage facility owned by the state’s largest utility, Florida Energy & Gentle.
FPL’s Manatee Power Storage Middle is a cutting-edge photo voltaic power know-how in an evolving pastoral setting in fast-growing Southwest Florida.
At night time or when there’s thick cloud cowl overhead, power from the solar captured by the utility’s close by photo voltaic panel subject may be saved for later use, additional decreasing the necessity to depend on fossil fuels and permitting extra renewable power generated to not go to waste.
Battery storage can fill electrical photo voltaic hole on cloudy days, at night time
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Very like a rooftop photo voltaic contractor may advise a house owner to put in a battery pack in tandem with their photo voltaic system, battery storage is changing into an integral piece of large-scale renewable power investments.
“I feel it’s secure to say that storage is a mandatory element as we evolve to extra intermittent sources,” mentioned Bryan Jacob, the photo voltaic program director for the nonprofit Southern Alliance for Clear Power.
Battery storage might help bridge the hole between power sources on the occasions of day when solar energy would come on-line and offline, Jacob mentioned, or it may function the increase wanted throughout spikes in utilization, similar to when folks return residence after work.
When these utility-scale photo voltaic investments have been first being made, “curtailment of photo voltaic wasn’t a big difficulty but,” Jacobs mentioned, referring to the method the place renewable power output is diminished from its full potential attributable to supply-demand wants.
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“So now you may take in extra technology of what could be taking place with out having to curtail it,” he mentioned.
FPL has greater than 500 megawatts of solar energy storage, the majority of it coming from the 409-megawatt Manatee Photo voltaic Power Middle in Parrish. Trying 10 years into the longer term, Juno Seashore-based FPL hopes to extend its battery capability seven-fold by including one other 3,200 megawatts of storage.
“You don’t want as many batteries (as photo voltaic crops) as a result of they don’t make new power, they simply retailer it for later,” Silver mentioned. “Lengthy-term, I feel we’re going to begin to see there’s going to be worth for batteries serving to to satisfy these afternoon peaks and early morning peaks as we get increasingly photo voltaic on the system.”
FPL photo voltaic battery situated in rural city that’s seeing inhabitants development
The Parrish facility, which began operations in December, is located on 40 acres off of State Street 62 in unincorporated Manatee County, the place single-family residence developments are slowly taking on farmland as Florida costs onward with its speedy development, in flip including extra customers onto the grid.
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About 400 battery modules, every weighing greater than 200 kilos and manufactured by Samsung, are rigorously stacked into every of the 132 massive steel containers on the location. Exterior of every container is a warning: “DANGER. Lithium-ion batteries. Fireplace and Explosion Danger.”
Every container can retailer about 7 megawatts, mentioned Marcos Quintana, regional supervisor for FPL. This storage facility can energy 329,000 houses for 2 hours.
This assortment of modules shops power that comes largely from the solar energy plant, which sits a few half-mile away because the crow flies.
“If in a pinch we have to cost quick and photo voltaic just isn’t obtainable, it’s technically able to charging from the grid,” mentioned Matt Silver, challenge director for FPL improvement. “However clearly, we wish to cost from the photo voltaic as a lot as doable.”
Location of FPL battery speaks to utility’s previous, current and future
Within the background of the photo voltaic panels and storage facility is certainly one of FPL’s pure fuel energy crops, the place two Seventies period red-and-white striped smokestacks that inform this half century-old story of Florida’s previous and future from fossil fuels to renewable power.
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These smokestacks have been set to be decommissioned with the arrival of the photo voltaic battery facility, however now they may solely be used if excessive electrical energy utilization in wintertime necessitates it, a part of FPL’s effort to organize for excessive winter climate.
The 74.5-megawatt solar energy plant, related to the storage facility by buried cables, began operation in 2016 and is made up of greater than 340,000 panels. A herd of cattle roam simply outdoors the gate, whereas inside, wild hog traps assist lure the notoriously harmful species from the costly tools.
FPL has 30 megawatts of photo voltaic storage on two of its different photo voltaic websites in Suwannee and Columbia counties, and the utility has various smaller-scale pilot tasks whereas exploring electrical automobile charging stations. Florida’s different main electrical utilities, particularly Tampa Electrical Co. and Duke Power, are additionally making investments in battery storage.
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“They’re actually simply one other instrument within the toolkit,” Silver mentioned. “Everyone’s at all times on the lookout for the silver bullet or the magic wand that we’ll wave and that’ll remedy all of your power wants. However like the rest in life, it’s in all probability going to be a wide range of issues that add up cumulatively to unravel our power wants.”
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Florida
SpaceX readies for next Starlink launch from Florida coast. Here’s when
BREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – SpaceX is readying for its next Starlink mission launch from Florida’s Space Coast on Friday morning.
In a release, the company announced that a Falcon 9 rocket will carry 21 more Starlink satellites into orbit from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
SpaceX officials said that liftoff is targeting 11:21 a.m., though backup opportunities will run until 2:15 p.m.
More opportunities will also be available on Saturday starting at 10 a.m. if needed.
The 45th Weather Squadron forecast shows that the chance of weather interfering with Friday’s launch attempt is less than 5%. However, that risk rises to 20% if pushed to this weekend.
Regardless, SpaceX reports that this is set to be the 25th flight for the first-stage booster used in this mission, which has previously been used to launch CRS-22, CRS-25, Crew-3, Crew-4, TelkomSat-113BT, Turksat-5B, Koreasat-6A, Eutelsat HOTBIRD-F2, Galileo L13, mPOWER-A, PSN MFS, and 13 other Starlink missions.
News 6 will stream the launch live at the top of this story when it happens.
Copyright 2025 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.
Florida
Lawsuit seeks to push DeSantis to call special elections for Florida Legislature seats
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Accusing Gov. Ron DeSantis of violating “his mandatory statutory duty,” the American Civil Liberties Union on Thursday filed a lawsuit asking a judge to order DeSantis to set special elections for two legislative seats that opened as part of a political shakeup after President-elect Donald Trump’s win in November.
Former Rep. Joel Rudman, R-Navarre, stepped down from the state House District 3 seat last week, and state Sen. Randy Fine, R-Brevard County, will exit his Senate District 19 seat on March 31 as they run in special elections for congressional seats.
The lawsuit filed in Leon County circuit court Thursday argued that DeSantis not setting special elections for the legislative seats will leave voters in Rudman’s district without representation “for the entirety of the 2025 session” and voters in Fine’s district without representation for about half of the 60-day legislative session, which begins March 4.
Voters “have a clear legal right to have the governor fix the date of a special election for each vacancy,” and the governor “has a clear legal duty to fix the dates of the special elections,” attorneys for the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Florida wrote in the lawsuit.
Plaintiffs in the case are Christina Forrest, a voter in House District 3, and Janet Laimont, a voter in Senate District 19.
“When a vacancy arises in legislative office, the people have the right to fill that vacancy in a special election,” the lawsuit said, pointing to a Florida law. “The reason is obvious: No Floridian should be deprived of representation because of the death, resignation, or removal of their representatives. But left to his own devices, the governor would deprive the residents of SD 19 and HD 3 of their constitutionally protected voice in the Capitol.”
The lawsuit said DeSantis “clear legal duty is ministerial and nondiscretionary in nature.” It seeks what is known as a “writ of mandamus” ordering DeSantis to set the special election dates.
“Each resident of the state has the right to be represented by one senator and one representative. These legislators are their voice in the halls of the Capitol,” the ACLU lawyers wrote. “The vacancies in these districts arose over 40 days ago. No other governor in living memory has waited this long to schedule a special election.”
Mark Ard, a spokesman for the Florida Department of State, said in an email that the agency “continues to work with the supervisors of elections to identify suitable dates for special elections” in the legislative districts.
“The election dates will be announced soon,” Ard wrote.
Fine and Rudman announced their plans to run for Congress in late November, as Trump began to fill out his administration.
Rudman is seeking to replace former U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, who resigned in Congressional District 1 after being tapped by Trump to serve as U.S. attorney general. Gaetz later withdrew his name from consideration for attorney general amid intense scrutiny related to a congressional ethics report.
Fine is running to replace U.S. Rep. Mike Waltz, who will serve as Trump’s national security adviser. Waltz will step down in Congressional District 6 on Jan. 20, the day Trump is sworn into office.
DeSantis quickly ordered special elections to fill the vacancies created by Gaetz and Waltz, the lawsuit noted. Special primary elections for the congressional seats will be held on Jan. 28, and special general elections will take place on April 1.
Rudman’s former state House district is made up of parts of Okaloosa and Santa Rosa counties, while Fine’s Senate district consists of part of Brevard County. DeSantis’ delay in setting special election dates in the districts also has drawn attention because they are in areas dominated by Republicans.
Previous governors’ “routine practice” was to “quickly call a special election for the resigning legislator’s seat and hold it concurrently with the special election for the higher office,” the lawsuit said, referring to the congressional seats as being the higher office.
In the two decades before DeSantis took office, 15 legislative vacancies occurred because a state lawmaker resigned to run for another office, according to the lawsuit. DeSantis’ predecessors set special elections to fill the resigning legislators’ seats on the same dates as the elections in which the legislators resigned to run, or earlier.
“But lately, Governor DeSantis has more often chosen to deviate from Florida’s longstanding practice of timely special elections, in violation of his mandatory statutory duty,” the lawsuit said.
As an example, the ACLU lawyers pointed to DeSantis’ drawn-out response to the 2021 death of U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, a Broward County Democrat.
DeSantis “failed to call a special election for 30 days — longer than any Florida governor had ever taken to call a special election in at least the prior 22 years, and possibly ever in the history of the state” to fill Hastings’ seat, the lawsuit argued.
DeSantis ultimately ordered a special election to fill Hastings’ seat — more than nine months after the congressman died.
DeSantis in 2021 also waited more than 90 days to order special elections to fill three seats vacated by legislators who sought to replace Hastings.
“The governor did not call special elections until he was forced to — after residents of the districts petitioned this court for mandamus relief,” Thursday’s lawsuit said. “Following months of inaction, the governor called elections within days of this court ordering him to show cause why the writ should not issue.”
In 2023, DeSantis waited 38 days to set a special election for a legislative vacancy.
“Yet again, the governor did not call the election until he was forced to — after this court ordered the governor to show cause why mandamus should not issue in a lawsuit brought by a district resident,” the ACLU’s lawyers wrote.
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Florida
Forward Depth Powering Panthers
Jesper Boqvist’s two goal game led the Florida Panthers to a 4-1 victory over the Utah Hockey Club. The win kept the team within four points of the Atlantic Division lead and it also put Boqvist one goal behind his career best at just the halfway point of the 2024-2025 campaign.
Boqvist’s performance continues a trend for the Panthers. Over the past few seasons, they’ve gotten the absolute most out of their depth forwards, with many of them posting their best offensive seasons while playing in Florida. In Boqvist’s first season with the Panthers, he’s the latest in the long line of bottom-six forwards powering the team to another playoff run.
Last year, it was center Kevin Stenlund. The fourth-line center plays a gritty and feisty game, but he found a scoring touch with the Cats during their Stanley Cup-winning campaign last year. Over 81 regular season games, he netted 11 goals and parlayed that into a new contract with the Utah Hockey Club.
Before that, it was Ryan Lomberg and Nick Cousins. During the 2022-2023 season, Lomberg reached new offensive heights and scored 12 goals in the regular season. Similarly, Cousins matched his best offensive campaign with nine goals and 27 points over 79 games.
Now, it’s Boqvist’s turn to be the breakout depth forward. He has some competition, however. 22-year-old Mackenzie Samoskevich, the team’s 2021 first-round pick, is getting his first full-time gig with the NHL club and looks like a fit. He has seven goals and 12 points through the first 37 games and will likely be the second bottom-six forward to score 10+ goals for the Panthers this season.
Either way, the trend continues in Florida. Their star power at the top of the lineup is on par with the best in the league and receives the majority of the attention from opposing teams and media. Understandly so, but their depth is what continues to power them towards a repeat of their Stanley Cup championship.
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