The Moroccan city of Ouarzazate is the place that is on the edge of
the Sahara desert where Hollywood movies like Lawrence of Arabia and
Gladiator, and the TV series Game of Throne were filmed. The city is
about to become the home of a solar power mega-plant. According to the
World Bank, the plant will supply electricity to 1.1 million of
Moroccans by 2018.
African Development Bank stated that this plant will be world’s
largest concentrated solar power plant in the world once the first phase
is complete. The potential for solar power in the desert has been a
subject of debate for a very long time. After the Chernobyl accident of
1986, German physicist Gerhard Knies, estimated that the world’s deserts
receive enough energy in a few hours to provide for humanity’s power
needs for an entire year. The only hurdle is to find a way to capture
the energy and transport it to the cities and to the villages
The plant will use a technology that is pricier than the photovoltaic
panels you see on roofs, but it will continuously produce power, even
at night and on cloudy days. The technology uses mirrors that glitter
across the skyline and heat up a liquid, which is mixed with water and
reaches a temperature close to 400 degrees Celsius. This will produce
steam which will drive a turbine that will generate electrical power.
Upon completion, the plant will have a capacity of 580MW of electricity,
enough to supply power to 1.1 million homes. Today, Morocco is very
exposed to fossil fuel’s fluctuating prices. According to the
environment minister, Hakima el-Haite, the kingdom imports 94% of its
energy as fossil fuels.
The project is scheduled for completion in 2020, and the Moroccan
authorities have the ambition to export solar energy to neighboring
countries. “We believe that it’s possible to export energy to Europe but
first we would have to build the interconnectors which don’t yet
exist,” said Maha el-Kadiri, a Moroccan solar energy agency spokeswoman.
“Specifically, we would have to build interconnections, which would not
go through the existing one in Spain, and then start exporting,” he
added.
http://pv.energytrend.com/news/Morocco_to_Become_the_Home_of_the_Worlds_ Largest_Concentrated_Solar_Power_Plant.html
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