Thursday, 16 August 2012

Gujarat Solar Power Plant : Biggest in ASIA


Gujarat Solar Power Plant : Biggest in ASIA Gujarat CM Narendra Modi at solar power plant
Gujarat CM Narendra Modi at solar power plant
An innovative solar power project in Gujarat has started generating 1 mw of power, that is 1.6 million units of electricity per year, enough to meet the domestic power requirement of 16,000 families. The project, mooted six months ago by the state power department, was operational on March 28 and will be inaugurated on April 24. In a first, solar panels were placed on a .75 km stretch of a canal of the Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam (SSNN) near Ahmedabad, thus saving land costs as well as preventing water evaporation.


Gujarat Solar Power Plant : Biggest in ASIA Gujarat CM Narendra Modi at solar power plant
Gujarat CM Narendra Modi at solar power plant
The government is also planning to insert micro turbines into the steel structure of solar panels to produce low-intensity hydropower. The state is already the leading solar power producer in the country. Solar parks in Gujarat have been generating 600 mw since March. This is twice the solar power generated in the rest of the country. One particular plant at Charanka village in north Gujarat produces 214 mw-the largest single park in Asia to do so. This solar energy prevents eight million tonnes of carbon dioxide from being released into the atmosphere; it also represents 9,00,000 tonnes of coal and natural gas saved annually. By 2022, the state plans to produce 10,000 mw of solar energy.

 

Gujarat Solar Power Plant : Biggest in ASIA Gujarat CM Narendra Modi at solar power plant
Says D.J. Pandian, state energy secretary, who oversaw the execution of the project, "When Chief Minister Narendra Modi mooted the idea in 2011, many thought it was difficult to execute. But we took the risk and today it is a reality. Solar plants require large tracts of land for installation as well as water for maintenance. This project requires none and also saves money by preventing evaporation of the dam water." S. Jagadeesan, managing director, ssnn, says the project has greater potential: "Solar power generation is possible on 3,500 km of the Narmada dam's 7,600-km-long branch canal network."


It can produce 1 MW electricity and you would be surprised to know that it can save 1 crore litres of water per kilometer annually by preventing it from evaporating. This project has the ability to tackle both energy security and water security, thus leaving behind a green footprint for future generations.

 
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 Source: Read more at: http://indiatoday.intoday.in/

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