Executive Magazine

Beirut River Solar Snake turned on

Solar energy starts to make its way onto the grid

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Last month’s heat wave saw near record highs in temperatur­e and heat indices across Lebanon, causing rolling blackouts on top of the regular scheduled electricit­y cuts in Beirut. Amid the power shortage comes 1 megawatt of good news – the Beirut River Solar Snake (BRSS), a photovolta­ic system spanning the Beirut River, has been switched on.

“The Solar Snake is on and already feeding electricit­y into the network – now it is connected to the grid and is in a testing period, but we didn’t announce it yet officially,” says Pierre Khoury director of the Lebanese Center for Energy Conservati­on (LCEC). He says the BRSS began its testing phase at the end of July and will be announced in a formal ceremony before or during September’s Beirut Energy Forum. Ferial Nohra, assistant general manager at Phoenix Energy, confirmed to Executive by email that the photovolta­ic system is feeding electricit­y into the public grid.

BRSS was originally scheduled for early 2015, but a long winter season, Khoury says, plus final preparatio­ns and aesthetic installati­ons – a chainlink fence, greenery, and signage – delayed delivery by nearly two months. “We could announce it today but we’re waiting for the right moment to announce to give [BRSS] visibility,” Khoury says.

The BRSS is a two phase project with a total planned output of 10 megawatts. Khoury says the LCEC has begun planning for the next phase but is currently focused on designing a 1 megawatt solar farm to be built at the Zahrani oil installati­ons south of Beirut.

THE BEIRUT RIVER

SOLAR SNAKE, A PHOTOVOLTA­IC SYSTEM SPANNING THE BEIRUT RIVER, HAS BEEN SWITCHED ON

 ??  ?? The Beirut River Solar Snake is now feeding electricit­y into the national grid
The Beirut River Solar Snake is now feeding electricit­y into the national grid

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