The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Jordan opens world’s largest solar park for refugee camp

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ZAATARI REFUGEE CAMP, Jordan: Jordan on Monday inaugurate­d the largest solar park to operate in a refugee facility, aiming to improve the lives of tens of thousands of Syrian refugees at the Zaatari desert camp.

The 4,000 solar panels with a total capacity of 12.9 megawatts are designed to provide 14 hours of electricit­y a day to Zaatari’s 80,000 inhabitant­s, according to the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees.

The project was financed by Germany at a cost of 15 million euros (US$17.5 million).

The UNHCR has previously been providing eight hours of electricit­y a day, costing 500,000 a month, said Stefano Severe, the agency’s representa­tive in Jordan.

With this solar panel plant and this grant from Germany, UNHCR will be able to provide 14 hours with zero cost. Stefano Severe, UNHCR representa­tive in Jordan

“With this solar panel plant and this grant from Germany, UNHCR will be able to provide 14 hours with zero cost,” he said at a ceremony at the camp attended by Jordan’s Energy Minister Salah al-Kharabsheh and German ambassador Birgitta SiefkerEbe­rle.

He said the savings would be used to improve other services in the camp.

The additional hours of electricit­y would improve the refugees’ lives “by giving more opportunit­ies for the kids to study in the night time, for people to store food in their fridges, to communicat­e with the outside world”, said Severe.

In May, Jordan scored a world first for a refugee camp powered by renewable energy, according to the UNHCR, when it opened a two-megawatt solar plant in Azraq which is home to 35,000 refugees from the war across the border in Syria. — AFP

 ??  ?? A general view shows part of a new solar plant at the Zaatari refugee camp. — AFP photo
A general view shows part of a new solar plant at the Zaatari refugee camp. — AFP photo

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