According to foreign media reports, the U.S. government approved on the 25th a Blyth solar power station, the world's largest solar energy project. According to the project plan, four large-scale solar power plants will be built in southern California, each with a construction cost of up to one billion US dollars.

The Interior Secretary of the United States, Ken Salazar, said: “The Blythe Solar Power Station will consist of four 250 megawatt power plants built in the sunny public land of the Mojave Desert. After completion, the power station can have a power generation capacity of 1,000. Megawatts. These batteries are enough to meet the electricity needs of 750,000 ordinary American households and Bryce will be the world's largest solar power facility."

According to Solar Millennium, which is responsible for the development of this project, the total installed capacity of the Blythe Solar Power Station is approximately equivalent to the turbine output of a nuclear power station or a large modern coal-fired power plant. SolarMillennium said on its website that they plan to begin construction of the Bryce Solar Power Station in 2010. At the peak, the entire project is expected to provide more than 1,000 jobs.

In recent weeks, the U.S. Department of the Interior has approved a series of renewable energy projects. The Blythe Solar Power Station is just one of them. In early October, Salazar approved the first five renewable energy projects, all of which were built on public land, including four in California and one in Nevada, both of which were hit hard by the economic downturn. . Two weeks ago, Salacha took part in the construction of the world’s largest wind tower manufacturing plant in Pueblo, Colorado’s working-class city, which will be operated by Vestas Denmark. A week ago, he signed a lease contract for the first major offshore wind power plant on the coast of New Jersey.