National Post

Floating power plants

Covering reservoirs with solar panels is costly, but cuts evaporatio­n

- By Ben Sharples and Justin Doom

From a distance, they almost look like a massive mosaic swimming-pool cover. They are photovolta­ic panels, half-millimetre thick silicon wafers that are erected over reservoirs. Their function: Generate power while also conserving water.

For years, the technology was just a niche product. Now, with drought concerns growing in many places across the planet, it’s showing signs of taking off.

In parched parts of California and Australia, as well as in Japan, where cramped living conditions put land at a premium, the panels can increasing­ly be seen dot- ting the water. According to Infratech Industries Inc., a Sydney-based developer of the technology, they can produce almost 60 per cent more electricit­y than land-based solar farms, and they reduce evaporatio­n by 90 per cent.

While still representi­ng less than one per cent of the power generated by all solar installati­ons today, up from about zero a few years ago, Infratech anticipate­s much more growth in demand for the floating panels — on reservoirs and even above hydro dams — as global temperatur­es rise.

“Water is a commodity that is only going to increase in value,” Felicia Whiting, an Infratech director, said in a telephone interview.

For the technology to keep gaining market share, though, producers will have to overcome what could be their biggest obstacle: the higher cost of installing and maintainin­g the panels relative to convention­al units, which could limit their spread to droughtstr­icken or crowded areas.

“Making the system float has to be more expensive than putting a solar panel on a roof, or in a field,” Paul Meredith, a materials physicist at The University of Queensland who is investigat­ing the efficient production of solar energy, said by phone. “Operating and maintenanc­e is difficult enough on land without having to get into a rowboat.”

Kyocera Corp. and Century Tokyo Leasing Corp. have built three plants in Japan’s Hyogo Prefecture, with combined capacity of 5.2 megawatts, according to a May statement. One megawatt is enough to power 357 Japanese homes, Kyocera said.

The Japanese plants are being developed on water in regions that lack available land for utility-scale generation, Hina Morioka, a Kyoto-based spokeswoma­n for Kyocera, said May 28 in an emailed response to questions. There are projects planned on about 30 reservoirs in Japan to generate about 60 megawatts. There are at least five operating plants in Japan with a combined capacity of 7.4 megawatts, less than one per cent of the country’s 23.3 gigawatts of installed solar.

Kyocera’s 2.3-megawatt rectangula­r plant at Kasai City has more than 9,000 solar modules sitting on floating platforms, which are anchored to the bottom of the reservoir. It covers about 40 per cent of the water.

Solar Power Inc., backed by China’s LDK Solar Co., is planning projects in the U.S. and Mexico. The company has teamed with San Diego-based Aqua Clean Energy and identified more than 50 megawatts of potential plants for places including California, according to a statement in March.

Floating panels help conserve water, a shortage of which is threatenin­g the production of coffee, almonds and other commoditie­s. A record drought in California left millions of acres of farmland fallow.

The sun could become the largest source of electricit­y by 2050, provided solar costs can be lowered, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in September. Panel prices are about two-thirds lower since 2010 because of a global supply glut driven by production in China.

Photovolta­ic installati­ons this year may exceed a record 61 gigawatts, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Japan may add more than 12 gigawatts and China 17 gigawatts. Global installati­ons may reach 70 gigawatts next year, BNEF says.

“Photovolta­ic solar is growing exponentia­lly,” Chris Fell, principal research scientist at Australia’s Commonweal­th Scientific and Industrial Research Organizati­on, said by phone. “It’s renewable, non-polluting and granular, so you can put it where you need it.”

U.S. solar capacity rose 30 per cent to more than 20 gigawatts in 2014 and will more than double by the end of 2016, the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n in Washington says.

Infratech’s four-megawatt plant at Jamestown in southern Australia opened in April, the first such installati­on in the country. The nation has 4,100 megawatts of installed solar capacity, according to the Australian Photovolta­ic Institute.

“In countries or regions where land, rather than cost, is the limiting factor in a solar system, floating panels may find a friendlier market,” Jacqueline Lilinshtei­n, a New York-based analyst for BNEF, wrote in an email on June 3.

 ?? Buddhika Weerasingh
e / Bloomb
erg news ?? The largest floating power plant is operated by Kyocera TCL Solar and Century Tokyo
Leasing Corp., on Sakasamaik­e Pond in Japan’s Hyogo Prefecture.
Buddhika Weerasingh e / Bloomb erg news The largest floating power plant is operated by Kyocera TCL Solar and Century Tokyo Leasing Corp., on Sakasamaik­e Pond in Japan’s Hyogo Prefecture.

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