Abu Dhabi turns on the ‘world’s biggest’ single site solar plant with 3.2MILLION panels

Abu Dhabi turns on the ‘world’s biggest’ single site solar plant made from 3.2MILLION panels that will supply 90,000 people with electricity

  • Noor Abu Dhabi, Sweihan, will reduce CO2 emissions by 1million metric tonnes
  • Project is 3.1 square miles in size and cost the emirate £700million to build 
  • Currently, UAE have the 29th highest carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels

Abu Dhabi has turned on the world’s largest single solar plant that will eventually provide green energy for 90,000 people. 

Once fully operational the Noor Abu Dhabi, which has 3.2million solar panels, will reduce emissions by around one million metric tonnes of CO2 – the equivalent of taking 200,000 cars off the road.

The 3.1 square mile (8 square kilometre) project in Sweihan is the biggest single plant in the world. 

Some solar parks are larger, but are run by multiple businesses who use shared infrastructure and work separately. 

China currently has the world’s largest solar park in Zhongwei, Ningxia, which covers 16.6 square miles (43 square kilometres) of land.

Abu Dhabi has turned on the world’s largest single solar plant (pictured) that will eventually provide green energy for 90,000 people

WHERE ARE THE WORLD’S LARGEST SOLAR FARMS? 

  1. Tengger Desert Solar Park in Zhongwei, Ningxia, China, produces 1,547 MW per year
  2. Kamuthi Solar Power Station in India produces 648MW
  3. Noor Ouarzazate in Morocco produces 580MW 
  4. Solar Star near Rosamond, California, produces 579MW 
  5. Enel Villanueva PV Plant in Mexico produces 310MW 

The UAE spent £700million (3.2billion AED) on the project which is part of the emirate’s energy strategy to increase the percentage of clean energy from 25 per cent to 50 per cent by 2050.

Currently, the UAE has the 29th highest carbon dioxide emissions based on their fossil fuel emissions.

The country is heavily reliant on its oil reserves, which are the seventh largest in the world.

Japan’s Marubeni Corporation, the Emirates Water and Electricity Company (EWEC), and JinkoSolar worked together on the project. 

Before the Noor Abu Dhabi was switched on, the largest single solar panel was Dubai’s Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar Park.

Mohammad Hassan Al Suwaidi, Chairman of EWEC said: ‘The completion of the project marks a significant milestone in the UAE’s Energy Strategy 2050, launched in 2017, to increase the contribution of clean energy in the total energy mix from 25 per cent to 50 per cent by 2050 while reducing the carbon footprint of power generation by 70 per cent. 

‘This is in line with the sectors transformation strategy by providing alternative sources of energy that can help us improve the sustainability of the water and electricity sector.’

Other green initiatives the country is trying include a waste-to-energy conversion plant in Al Warsan, Dubai.

Currently, the UAE have the 29th highest carbon dioxide emissions based on their fossil fuel emissions

Currently, the UAE have the 29th highest carbon dioxide emissions based on their fossil fuel emissions

WHAT IS SOLAR POWER?

Solar panels convert energy from the sun into electrical power (stock image)

Solar panels convert energy from the sun into electrical power (stock image)

Solar power is the conversion of energy from sunlight into electricity. 

Two methods for generating solar power exist.

Photovoltaics — the kind of solar panel you might see built into a calculator — are capable of directly converting light into electrical power. 

In concentrated solar power systems, however, mirrors or lenses are first used to collect the sunlight that falls on a large area and focus it — creating heat that can be used to drive a steam turbine and generate electricity.

The productivity of solar panels is dependant on the sunlight they receive in a given location — a factor which is dependant on both latitude and climate.

Optimum locations for solar farms include the arid tropics and subtropics, with deserts lying at such low latitudes often being cloudless and getting around 10 hours of sunlight each day.

According to NASA, the eastern part of the Sahara — the Libyan Desert — is the sunniest place on the Earth.

Solar power accounted for 1.7 per cent of the world’s electricity production in 2017, and has been growing at a rate of 35 per cent each year.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk