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AORA Solar Tulip Power TowerClean tech company <a href="http://staimanmedia.com/Aora/">AROA</a> recently installed their second energy-generating Solar Tulip power tower in Spain, and the soaring flower-shaped power plant just went online this week. The beauty of the system stems beyond the elegant solar energy capturing tower - the system is designed to be modular, unlike any other <a href="http://inhabitat.com/video-gemasolar-plant-in-spain-is-the-worlds-first-24hr-solar-plant/">concentrated solar power</a> (CSP) electrical generator out there. The system also uses much less water than steam solar generators, enabling it to conserve precious resources on its hot desert site.1
AORA Solar Tulip Power Tower<a href="http://staimanmedia.com/Aora/">AROA</a>'s Solar Tulip is firstly a unique, if not elegant looking concentrated solar power tower which was very much designed to look less jarring in the landscape. The Israel-based company's lead design architect Haim Dotan <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-02-08/solar-tulip-targets-facebook-generation-with-designer-power.html">stated</a>: "the Solar Tulip's beauty doesn't mean that it's more expensive. It's down to fun and hard work."2
AORA Solar Tulip Power TowerThe relationship between aesthetics and industrial <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/concentrated-solar-power/">solar energy plants</a> is a new frontier.3
AORA Solar Tulip Power TowerThe system works in a unique fashion as well. Each installation can produce a peak output of 100 kWh, and individual plants are capable of being networked together. Thus creating scalable systems which grow over time and can be implemented quickly with simple financing.4
AORA Solar Tulip Power Tower50 mirrors track the sun and heat air inside the bulb to 1,000 degrees centigrade. As the air expands it is forced through a turbine to create electricity -- rather than using conventional steam, which consumes 10 times the water for operations. Each plant will cost an estimated $550,000.5
AORA Solar Tulip Power TowerThe plant can also use conventional or biomass fuel to act as a bridge when the sun goes behind clouds or sets, and it is capable of <a href="http://inhabitat.com/worlds-first-molten-salt-solar-plant-produces-power-at-night/">running 24/7</a> to produce a steady flow of electricity to the grid.6






