Thucydides wrote:For the first part, heating a large enough quantity of the heat storage medium (metals or salt does not really make a difference) will take a considerable amount of time, since the person drawing on the heat energy needs a "clean" and consistent source of heat. If this is taking a long time (especially if you are replenishing a drawn down reservoir after a long cloudy spell) then the person paying you for that heat energy might have to down tools while the accumulator gets back up to operating temperature
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That is not how salts based accumulators works.
Typically salts are heated around 500°C in the reflectors and used to create supercritical steam. After being used in first stage, salts are still about 200°C and can be used either to create secondary steam or stored.
so what is stored is only the excess to need in regard of what is produced. There is usually a high temp (500°C) small tank to deal with the cloudy situation (at least in the existing configs) but the main storage is secondary and made of several tanks not a huge one, so that a maximum temp (around 250°C) is kept in part of the storage. Another thing that makes apart using salts from using metallic alloys is that even if the former drop so low in temp that they go solid, it is still a salt that at worse will form clumps easily grindable that, with a carefully designed circulation pumps system, can still be fed to the reflectors to be restored in liquid form, only more slowly due to the much higher pseudo viscosity.
AFAIK, the 600MW Spain (Solar tres) installation tanks need only 6 hours at 50% charge in summer to compensate night heat loss and energy drawn. They dint go solid in the night though.
As for land. the most basic rule of economics is supply and demand. When demand for desert real estate becomes strong, the costs of that land will rise accordingly. Desert land is cheap right now because very few people want to live or work there (compared to temperate climate zones). Make plans to generate large amounts of energy using large surface solar plants in the desert and suddenly you will be paying through the nose for the land.
There is a major island, the size of a continent, unconsacred right next door and most of Charis inland itself is too. Real estate is not a problem