Staff Report
Published Feb. 2, 2012
BMW Manufacturing installed enough solar panels at its Spartanburg County facility to power the 24,000-square-foot Zentrum Museum, the plant’s heritage museum and visitors’ center.
BMW installed enough solar panels at its Spartanburg County facility to power the 24,000-square-foot Zentrum Museum. The panels were installed in front of the museum, parallel to Interstate 85. (Photo/Provided) |
“Adding a new, alternative energy platform to our energy portfolio is another step in our commitment to sustainable methods of generating power at our factory,” said Duncan Seaman, department manager of market operations for the U.S. and Canada. “It is the perfect complement to our existing landfill gas-to-energy and hydrogen fuel cell program and offsets the fossil fuel requirements otherwise needed to run our facility.”
The solar panels, completed in partnership with Southern Energy Management, were installed in front of the Zentrum Museum parallel to Interstate 85. BMW invested $500,000 in this installation. Southern Energy Management is headquartered in Morrisville, N.C. with a regional office in Greenville. SunStore Solar also served as a consultant to BMW on this project.
Since 2003, methane gas has been collected, cleaned and compressed from a local landfill and used to power more than 50% of the BMW plant’s total energy requirements. In 2009, the company invested $12 million in its landfill gas program to further improve efficiency. Implementation of the program has reduced CO2 emissions by about 92,000 tons per year and saves about $5 million annually in energy costs.
More recently, the company announced the addition of a hydrogen storage and distribution center within its on-site 11 Megawatt Energy Center to facilitate on-site fueling of a hydrogen-fuel cell material handling fleet inside the 1.2 million-square-foot assembly plant that completes final assembly of the BMW X3 Sports Activity Vehicle.


