Tenaga solar: Padang pasir bertukar jd padang cermin
55,000 covering an area the size of 400 football pitches will project sunlight onto the world’s highest solar tower
21 August 2016
Israel is hoping to shine a beacon on the importance of sustainability as it prepares to create the world's highest solar tower by 2017.
Workers have already been busy installing a whopping 55,000 mirrors around the Ashalim solar power station in the Negev desert near Kibbutz Ashalim, southern Israel. Photos show the scale of the project - which covers a mind-blowing one million squared metres.
The mirrors will feed solar heat into a 240-metre-tall solar tower, which is believed to be the highest in the world according to constructors, GE Renewable Energy. Currently Israel generates most of its electricity with coal, natural gas and oil.
The mirrors themselves are also extremely progressive, for, not only are they bigger than those used in previous projects, but are also controlled by a dedicated Wifi network, rather than cables.
The tower is expected to create 320GWH of electricity, which is enough to power around 120,000 homes and provide around one percent of Israel's electricity. This is particularly important for the country, as it aims to supply 10 per cent of its energy needs by renewables by 2020.
A worker is seen scaling the side of the monumental tower, which believed to be the tallest of its kind in the world
Eran Gartner, CEO of the Israeli Megalim solar power company explains details of at the construction site of the Ashalim solar power station.
21 August 2016
Israel is hoping to shine a beacon on the importance of sustainability as it prepares to create the world's highest solar tower by 2017.
Workers have already been busy installing a whopping 55,000 mirrors around the Ashalim solar power station in the Negev desert near Kibbutz Ashalim, southern Israel. Photos show the scale of the project - which covers a mind-blowing one million squared metres.
The mirrors will feed solar heat into a 240-metre-tall solar tower, which is believed to be the highest in the world according to constructors, GE Renewable Energy. Currently Israel generates most of its electricity with coal, natural gas and oil.
The mirrors themselves are also extremely progressive, for, not only are they bigger than those used in previous projects, but are also controlled by a dedicated Wifi network, rather than cables.
The tower is expected to create 320GWH of electricity, which is enough to power around 120,000 homes and provide around one percent of Israel's electricity. This is particularly important for the country, as it aims to supply 10 per cent of its energy needs by renewables by 2020.
A worker is seen scaling the side of the monumental tower, which believed to be the tallest of its kind in the world
Eran Gartner, CEO of the Israeli Megalim solar power company explains details of at the construction site of the Ashalim solar power station.
Sumber : Ternyata Viral
Sumber : Jamgetah
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