Floating Solar Power Production
- November 15, 2024
- Posted by: BiconAdmin
- Category: Solar Power
What is Floating Solar Power Production?
Floating photovoltaics means floating solar plants on lakes and other bodies of water. The technology enables energy companies to expand solar power without taking up more land. In 2021, the installed capacity worldwide was significantly above two gigawatts and counting, according to the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems (ISE). Floating PV plant technology has enormous potential for generating energy and protecting the climate – potential that has barely been tapped into yet. In contrast to ground-mounted solar panels, PV modules are installed on floating structures and operate on a body of standing water or the sea.
Ground-mounted solar farms need plenty of space. In densely populated areas with a high energy demand, floating PV technology could provide the decisive advantage in the expansion of renewables. In Europe, and particularly in Germany, there are many artificial water bodies that fulfil the technological requirements for floating PV. According to a study by Fraunhofer ISE, 500 lakes at former opencast mining sites alone have a useful potential in the two-digit gigawatt range.
How floating photovoltaics works?
How this technology works in practice is demonstrated at RWE’s floating PV plant at the company’s Amer power station site in the Netherlands. Here, 13,400 solar modules with an installed capacity of 6.1 MWp generate green electricity. To prevent the modules from drifting off, for example in strong wind, they are anchored to 52 concrete blocks that have been placed at the bottom of the lake and that weigh 4.6 tonnes each. A total of 25 kilometres of cable were laid to bring the electricity onshore and feed it into the power plant grid.
Keywords: Floating Solar Energy Technology in India
Source: RWE