The large solar PV parks in the world

Forum solar photovoltaic PV and solar electricity generation from direct radiation solar energy.
Leo Maximus
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by Leo Maximus » 28/05/15, 15:01

Leo Maximus wrote:
moinsdewatt wrote:
Leo Maximus wrote:
Japan is covered with PV panels at the rate of 30 MW per day ....


Really ?
It would make 11 GW a year. It seems to me a lot.

That's a lot indeed, it's equivalent to 1 EPR every 4 at 5 weeks!

Rectification. In fact, it's not the equivalent of an EPR every 4 at 5 weeks but an EPR every 3 weeks.

Link : http://www.pv-magazine.com/news/details ... z3bR9RiI00

Image

And the pace should accelerate further. Japan is covered with PV panels. This is the revenge of the solar, murdered by this p ..... nuclear lobby in the 70 / 80 years. : Evil:

For aesthetics, we'll get used ... : Cheesy:
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I Citro
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by I Citro » 28/05/15, 16:01

This kind of individual habitat is not especially beautiful ...

But these facilities are from my point of view more relevant because closer to the places of consumption and therefore reduce losses online.
In addition, they do not reduce the surface area of ​​natural spaces, where the soil absorbs water to recharge groundwater, grow carbon sinks (trees), grow food, limit soil erosion. .

Large photovoltaic surfaces are "return" installations that enrich investors whose primary objective is to sell to individuals. While individual roofs benefit individuals (and this should not be ...) :?
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by moinsdewatt » 28/05/15, 21:23



It says 7 GW on the fiscal year between March 2013 and Mars 2014.
Not bad anyway.
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Leo Maximus
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by Leo Maximus » 30/05/15, 12:54

Installation of 12,7 GW in 2015 in Japan according to Bloomberg, ie 35 MW per day.

More in the PRC.
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by Christophe » 30/05/15, 13:12

35 MW a day is huge!
Did they understand the Fukushima lesson ???

If so, all the better ... because here we have not yet understood it!
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moinsdewatt
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by moinsdewatt » 30/05/15, 13:19

Leo Maximus wrote:Installation of 12,7 GW in 2015 in Japan according to Bloomberg, ie 35 MW per day.

.


I would like to have the link please. :D
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moinsdewatt
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by moinsdewatt » 30/05/15, 13:40

continuation of this 08 Nov 2014 post https://www.econologie.com/forums/post278758.html#278758

Cestas: the construction site of Europe's largest solar power station

Monday 25 May 2015 / Written by: Fabien Maout lenergeek

It is at Cestas, 20 kilometers south of Bordeaux in the Gironde, that is currently built the largest solar park in Europe. A large-scale project that is fully in line with the energy transition. Commissioning is scheduled for October.

A titanic project ...

The Constantine power plant, built on the territory of the municipality of Cestas, will extend on 260 hectares. It's the equivalent of ... 300 football fields. In total, this represents 983.000 photovoltaic panels, placed on 16.500 support tables in steel and aluminum, but also more than 4.000 kilometers of electric cables - overhead and underground - intended to route the electricity produced to the network.

Currently, a team of twenty people poses between 6.000 and 7.000 panels per day. The project is being carried out by a consortium led by Eiffage, in partnership with Schneider Electric and Krinner. "We preferred to take a technology that is both robust and simple, with panels that must last about fifty years," said Xavier Barbaro, CEO of Neoen, the main shareholder of the project.

"It's going to be the densest solar power station in Europe and the most competitive. It will produce four to five times more electricity per hectare than the most recent plants, "he adds. The Constantin power station, with a capacity of 300 MW, will produce 350 GWh of electricity, the equivalent of the annual consumption of a city like Bordeaux.

Total amount of investments: 360 million. Electricity generated by the solar power plant will be sold to EDF for 102 euros / MWh, a subsidized rate by the state but the most competitive ever reached for solar in France. In comparison, the feed-in tariff for onshore wind is 82 euros / MWh. A price that Xavier Barbaro hopes to reach in two years.

... in the light of the energy transition

The Cestas project is the second largest French energy project, behind the Flamanville EPR. It is also the only project of this size that is set up in the solar energy sector in France.

In recent years, the government has favored smaller solar power plants. The goal? In particular, avoid land use conflicts with agriculture. Thus, the last major plant commissioned, that of Toul-Rosières in Meurthe-et-Moselle (115 MW), was inaugurated by EDF in 2012 ...

Mr Barbaro also deplores the administrative complexity faced by the photovoltaic industry, particularly for these large-scale projects: "The shock of simplification has not come to us. Because for quite obscure reasons, we can not build in France plants of more than 12 MW, which forced us for this project to mount 25 different companies ".

However, the Aquitaine region will be pleased to be the best endowed in France in terms of installed solar capacities, with 770 MW distributed on 80 parks. "We are not against nuclear energy," says Neoen's CEO, "but this project shows that photovoltaics has its place in the energy mix and is no longer anecdotal as it could be there are still some years. We are not in a fashion. Photovoltaic sets in alongside nuclear power and hydraulics ".

http://lenergeek.com/2015/05/25/cestas- ... uropeenne/
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Leo Maximus
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by Leo Maximus » 30/05/15, 16:17

moinsdewatt wrote:
Leo Maximus wrote:Installation of 12,7 GW in 2015 in Japan according to Bloomberg, ie 35 MW per day.


I would like to have the link please. :D

Here are 2 links in English:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/ ... and-swells

http://solar.cleantechnology-business-r ... 15-4586533

12,7 GW in 2015 that makes 35 MW / day.

Image

Image
In fact, this extraordinary growth started in 2009 ~ 2010, just before the Fukushima disaster. Astonishing! :?:

The Japanese people do not want the nuke to restart and make a big effort on the PV. Ditto for geothermal. Great!

And each train of the future Maglev will need 32MW during 40mn to make Tokyo-Nagoya at 505 km / h average. Will have some juice ... : Lol:
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by moinsdewatt » 02/06/15, 16:39

Thanks for the links.

On my side meanwhile I found:

figures for the last fiscal year 2014-2015.

9.21 GW solar PV installed in addition to this year's in Japan (it's huge!)
that break down into
- 1.97 GW solar PV in residential and,
- 7.24 GW in non-residential.


PV module shipments to Japan hit 9.21 GW in FY 2014 / 15

May 26, 2015

Total solar module shipments to the Japanese market in fiscal 2014 / 15 have increased by 7.8% year-on-year to the record-high 9.21 GW, according to data by Japan Photovoltaic Energy Association (JPEA).

Only 37% of the equipment supplied by Japanese firms was locally manufactured. This compares to a 41.2% share the previous fiscal year.

In fiscal 2014 / 15, residential module shipments in Japan declined to 1.97 GW, as a result of the higher consumption tax which reduced the number of new projects. Meanwhile, shipments to non-residential projects amounted to 7.24 GW. In particular, the 500-kW-plus segment accounted for 3.78 GW, JPEA's annual report shows

http://renewables.seenews.com/news/to-t ... -15-477967
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by moinsdewatt » 02/06/15, 16:39

And for future prospects, the Japan Photovoltaic Energy Association (JPEA) aims to
- 65.7GW installed in 2020 and,
- 100 GW installed in 2030. (which would provide 11.2% of Japan's electricity consumption)


The Japan Photovoltaic Energy Association (JPEA) has published a strategy for the development of 100GW.

"2030 PV Outlook Xnumx" is an addendum to PV Outlook 2030, which has been published by JPEA at irregular intervals since 2010, with the last iteration issued in 2013.

In the document, the association explains that the introduction of the fi rst in the field of renewable energy, followed by a number of significant barriers and technical, regulatory and political challenges. Japanese PV industry's progress towards 2012.

Somewhere between a forecast and a roadmap, the document has been produced by 2002. JPEA said it has added to the previous version of the 2030 document to become part of the past year or so. The organization also wrote that with 2030 now only a few years ago.

JPEA says that by 2020, Japan could target 65.7GW of solar capacity, raising the bar of predictions made in 2013 for 49.4GW by that date. By reaching 100GW by 2030, the country would be meeting 11.2% of its overall power generation demand with PV.

JPEA also recommends that measure be taken to the value of the domestic price of 1% of GDP at present to double that figure by 2030.
...............

http://www.pv-tech.org/news/with_100gw_ ... dustry_gro
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