Sunflower Electric Power Corporation announced this week the state’s largest commercial solar facility will come to Ford County next year, and with it, extra funds for the Dodge City USD 443 School District. The 150-megawatt Boot Hill Solar Project will consist of 300,000 solar modules mounted on a single-axis solar tracking system on 1,000 acres near Sunflower’s Fort Dodge Station, one mile southeast of Dodge City. Construction is scheduled to begin in 2025 and will take about one year to complete. In lieu of taxes for 10 years, the project will demonstrate good citizenship by providing funding to Dodge City Unified School District No. 443 and Ford County for the benefit of the local community, according to a Sunflower press release. The facility will generate approximately 400,000 megawatt hours annually, which represents about 9% of the Sunflower system’s energy needs. Strategically locating the Boot Hill Solar Project near existing Sunflower assets will provide cost and schedule benefits to all of the member-owners, the release stated. Sunflower is a cooperatively operated wholesale generation and transmission utility serving seven member distribution utilities located in western Kansas, including Victory Electric. “We are always glad when we can provide more value to our members,” Victory CEO Shane Laws said in the release. “Having what will be the state’s largest operating solar facility located in our community makes this project even more exciting. Thank you to everyone who has helped us get to this phase.” Sunflower partnered with Arizona-based Alluvial Power to design and construct the project, and the two entities have executed a power purchase agreement for the energy generated by the Boot Hill Solar Project.
Source: Dodge City Daily Globe