Toronto Star

Solar highway suffers blackout

Five days after opening, inspectors found panel was missing, with surroundin­g ones also damaged

- JONATHAN KAIMAN LOS ANGELES TIMES

BEIJING— It was supposed to be China’s grand “photovolta­ic highway” — a solar energy-collecting, onekilomet­re stretch of road that symbolized the country’s extraordin­ary clean energy ambitions.

But that was last month. Five days after the road opened in the industrial city of Jinan for testing on Dec. 28, inspectors found that one two-metre panel was missing — allegedly plundered by thieves, according to the Qilu Evening News, a local newspaper. The purported thieves had also damaged seven surroundin­g panels. The road has since been closed.

“We can speculate the damage was not done by hand, nor does it appear it was done by a big vehicle,” Xu Dehao, a constructi­on worker at Shandong Pavenergy, the company overseeing the project, told the newspaper. “It was more likely done by a profession­al team.”

Affected parts of the road appeared to be “corroded by liquid,” Xu said, adding that a nearby fence was damaged.

An unnamed Shandong Pavenergy employee told the newspaper that several suspicious figures appeared by the road as it was under constructi­on, and that some took photos and stole components. “Now that the road is complete, they still come to steal,” the employee said. “I really don’t understand why.”

Others involved in the project warned against hasty judgment. “It is not as bad as it says in the media,” an unnamed employee at the Qilu Transporta­tion Developmen­t Group, an investor in the project, told the newspaper. “In fact, only a small strip of the road was damaged. We are still not sure if it is stolen. The police are investigat­ing.”

Jinan, an industrial provincial capital of nearly seven million people, is a frequently smog-cloaked metropolis. An aerial picture published by the state-run China Daily shows the road running straight through a wintry landscape on the city’s South Express Ring Road, flanking scattered houses and patches of barren trees.

The road has three layers, according to China Daily: an insulating layer on the bottom, a middle layer of photovolta­ic devices and a protective top layer of transparen­t concrete.

“The top layer has good flexibilit­y, which can both withstand the pressure of large vehicles and protect the fragile amorphous silicon boards underneath,” Zhang Hongchao, an engineerin­g expert at China’s Tongji University who helped design the project, told the state-run New China News Agency.

Zhang told CCTV, China’s state broadcaste­r, that the road could generate onemillion kilowatt-hours of electricit­y a year, enough to power 800 households. He added that it cost about $42.50 (U.S.) per square foot.

Electricit­y from the project could “melt the snow in winter to make driving safer,” state-run China Global Television Network said in a report. “It could also remote-charge electric cars.”

China became the world’s top solar power producer last year; it produces 78 gigawatts of solar power annually, compared with 40.3 gigawatts in the U.S. (The U.S. ranks fourth.)

The China Daily has billed the road as “the first photovolta­ic highway in the world,” though it’s not the first road to collect solar energy. The French village of Tourouvre-au-Perche unveiled a similarloo­king “solar panel road” in 2016, intended to power street lights in the village of 3,400 people. The Netherland­s built a solar panel-embedded bike path in 2014, despite public concerns about costeffect­iveness.

The Jinan highway is the largest project of its type; its solar panels cover 63,200 square feet, about twice the area of France’s road.

China has also built a solar road in the eastern province Zhejiang designed to transfer solar energy into electromag­netic waves, which can wirelessly charge electric vehicles.

 ??  ?? The road in Jinan reportedly has three layers and includes photovolta­ic devices.
The road in Jinan reportedly has three layers and includes photovolta­ic devices.

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