DutchNews, February 7,
2018
A Dutch consortium is to build
the first offshore floating solar energy farm in the world, which the partners
say could produce more power than land-based solar farms.
Six groups are
involved in the project which will take three years and is co-financed by the
Dutch government’s Enterprise Agency. The solar farm will be placed 15
kilometres off the Dutch coast at Scheveningen.
A floating energy farm fitted
with solar panels could be a solution for places where there are no means to
generate clean energy on land, project initiator Oceans of Energy said on its
website.
Oceans of Energy and the University of Utrecht are together
investigating the viability of electricity production at sea which is expected
to yield 15% more power than a land-based facility.
According to the firm’s CEO
Allard van Hoeken, solar farms at sea pose major challenges which can be
conquered by putting together the experience and knowledge of Dutch knowledge
institutions and offshore industry companies.
If the project is successful, solar
power could potentially provide three quarters of the country’s energy needs,
programme director of the solar power division of TKI Urban Energy Wijnand van
Hooff said.
‘Projects like these are necessary to explore both the commercial
and energetic potential of applications such as these,’ he said.
The
Netherlands is currently cutting down on gas extraction in the province of
Groningen due to earthquakes and is phasing out the use of domestic low calorie
gas in homes. The government hopes that by 2050 all homes should have have
switched to an alternative source of energy.

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