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CNN: The world's first solar airport no longer pays for electricity- Congrats

yolo2016

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http://money.cnn.com/2016/03/14/technology/india-cochin-solar-powered-airport/index.html

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Fed up with their hefty electricity bill, managers at Cochin International Airport in southern India took matters into their own hands.
Three years ago, they began adding solar panels -- first on the roof of the arrivals terminal, then on and around an aircraft hangar. The success of those initial efforts led to a much bigger endeavor.

"We wanted to be independent of the electricity utility grid," Jose Thomas, the airport's general manager, told CNNMoney.

Last year, the airport commissioned the German company Bosch to build a vast 45-acre solar plant on unused land near the international cargo terminal.

The plant came online in August, making Cochin the world's first fully solar-powered airport.

The tens of thousands of panels generate on average slightly more than the roughly 48,000-50,000 kilowatts of power that the airport -- the seventh busiest in India -- uses per day, according to Thomas. Surplus energy is fed into the wider electricity grid.

The big project cost around 620 million rupees ($9.3 million), a sum the airport expects to save in less than six years by not having to pay electricity bills anymore. It also estimates the solar plant will avoid more than 300,000 metric tons of carbon emissions from coal power over the next 25 years.

Related: India's big move into solar is already paying off

At a time when solar power has become much cheaper in India, Cochin's initiative has drawn national and international attention.

Indian Civil Aviation Minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju visited Cochin in January and told reporters that authorities have directed other airports around the country to start using at least some solar power.

Kolkata's international airport, which is bigger and busier than Cochin's, is planning to build a solar plant covering as much as 70 acres this year that would reduce its electric bill by a third, according to Siga Judson, the airport's general manager.

Cochin has received a visit from engineers from Liberia's airport authority who were interested in the solar installation. George Airport in South Africa, meanwhile, is developing a solar project of its own.

Thomas said airports generally have plenty of vacant land that can be used for solar panels. But he said it's a lot easier for smaller facilities to become fully solar-powered because they use less electricity.

Cochin is already working to expand its solar-power base to meet increased demand from a bigger international terminal it's building.

One smaller new plant is expected to be ready by the end of April, and the airport is also planning to put reinforced concrete over a canal and cover it with panels.

"We want to continue our status as a power neutral airport," Thomas said.

-- Huizhong Wu contributed to this report.
 
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well they choose the most expensive way of producing electricity .
and I wonder if they have included the maintenance for those solar panel in their six year calculation .
 
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well they choose the most expensive way of producing electricity .
and I wonder if they have included the maintenance for those solar panel in their six year calculation .
Maybe they should have hired you since your crystal ball has already judged it to most expensive, and that they may have not taken maintainance costs when figuring total cost. Really.
 
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Maybe they should have hired you since your crystal ball has already judged it to most expensive, and that they may have not taken maintainance costs when figuring total cost. Really.
You dont need to be arrogant , he raised a valid point. In India installing is one thing and maintenance is another.
 
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You dont need to be arrogant , he raised a valid point. In India installing is one thing and maintenance is another.
What does that even mean- lol. He insulted your people's intelligence by saying Indians don't know how to calculate costs, and you qualified it. lol

I was assuming Indians would know simple accounting and that maintenance costs had to be taken in account, when calculating overall costs. Maybe indians like you have no clue to take maintenance into account?
 
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What does that even mean- lol. He insulted your people's intelligence by saying Indians don't know how to calculate costs, and you qualified it. lol

I was assuming Indians would know simple accounting and that maintenance costs had to be taken in account, when calculating overall costs. Maybe indians like you have no clue to take maintenance into account?
I dont find anything insulting rather yours is. The solar power is a very good way of producing electricity but it does have some disadvantages.
 
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I dont find anything insulting rather yours is. The solar power is a very good way of producing electricity but it does have some disadvantages.
When did I disagree? I've said solar power is a great alternative, I posted this article and said congrats.

I have a creeping suspicion your lack of comprehending the English language i.e.not understanding what was said_ is confusing you.
 
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I dont find anything insulting rather yours is. The solar power is a very good way of producing electricity but it does have some disadvantages.
Disadvantages how?

Yes i find that @JEskandari was insulting and sadden that u didn't

The Maintenance cost is quite negligible compare to HUGH saving on sourced electricity - SO Much THAT here in Abu Dhabi , there is MASDAR CITY that is building one of the largest solar fields in the world!

Newer Solar panel too here are built rugged and to a standard to handle harsh environments , if they can handle the desert , Cochin is better

@yolo2016 Thanks for the article! Do check out MASDAR CITY, quite impressive!
 
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well they choose the most expensive way of producing electricity .
and I wonder if they have included the maintenance for those solar panel in their six year calculation .

They sell back to the grid during the day so they are making money.
 
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well they choose the most expensive way of producing electricity .
and I wonder if they have included the maintenance for those solar panel in their six year calculation .

You think Kerala sends them out as plumbers but by the time they get to Qatar or KSA they have become accountants and business planners.
 
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Disadvantages how?

Yes i find that @JEskandari was insulting and sadden that u didn't

The Maintenance cost is quite negligible compare to HUGH saving on sourced electricity - SO Much THAT here in Abu Dhabi , there is MASDAR CITY that is building one of the largest solar fields in the world!

Newer Solar panel too here are built rugged and to a standard to handle harsh environments , if they can handle the desert , Cochin is better

@yolo2016 Thanks for the article! Do check out MASDAR CITY, quite impressive!
First Cochi is not desert where almost always u get sunlight to get the optimum yield round the year.
It would definitely work in Gujrat and Rajastan but I have my reservation .
And I never said solar power is not good but rather that guy had some point which we need to discuss rather hit him....
 
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Thanks to solar power, this airport is no longer paying for electricity
large_poBOxEAZ9Wibo10yXC-_z2oZqQe7notm6am9qFYNC_8.jpg



If you fly over Cochin International Airport in Kerala, India, you will find yourself staring down at over 46,000 solar panels. The airport, India's seventh busiest, last year became the first airport in the world to run completely on solar power.

It started as a pilot project in 2013 with 400 panels on the airport rooftop, an attempt by management to lower the airport's energy bills. After the installation of a 12 megawatt solar plant, the airport was able to run entirely on solar power.

The airport has now stopped paying for its electricity altogether, and even sends energy back to the grid.


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Solar energy has become a cheap option in India - the price has dropped to a similar level to that of coal.

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi has said the country’s investment target for the source of renewable energy will be increased to $100 billion, five times greater than current levels, scaling solar power to more than 10% of India’s total energy sector by 2022.



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The successful project has inspired other airports both nationally and internationally to invest in renewable energy. Kolkata's international airport in India is now also looking to build a solar plant to reduce its electric bill by a third.

South Africa recently opened the continent's first solar-powered airport in George, in the Western Cape. It's expected to save an excess of 1.2 million litres of water every year, and will contribute to around 40% of the airport's electricity needs.



Kerala is the only Indian state with 4 International airports.
 
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Maybe they should have hired you since your crystal ball has already judged it to most expensive, and that they may have not taken maintainance costs when figuring total cost. Really.
You think Kerala sends them out as plumbers but by the time they get to Qatar or KSA they have become accountants and business planners.
Disadvantages how?

Yes i find that @JEskandari was insulting and sadden that u didn't

The Maintenance cost is quite negligible compare to HUGH saving on sourced electricity - SO Much THAT here in Abu Dhabi , there is MASDAR CITY that is building one of the largest solar fields in the world!

Newer Solar panel too here are built rugged and to a standard to handle harsh environments , if they can handle the desert , Cochin is better

@yolo2016 Thanks for the article! Do check out MASDAR CITY, quite impressive!
You guys are so oversensitive ,look there is two ways to produce electricity from solar power,in one they covert light directly two electricity with the help of photoelectric cell this is an example (Nellis Solar Power Plant at Nellis Air Force Base in the USA.)
Nellis_AFB_Solar_panels.jpg

this way is expensive in industrial scale and photo electric cells are not that much efficient also look at how they designed the base of solar panels ,they are designed them so they can rotate the panels with movement of the sun so they can increase efficiency. but in the case of this airport those panels are fixed and they can't benefit from the movement of the panels so you must expect a lot less power output in mornings and evenings and had to rely on power cells in those times and hose cells are expensive and not so much environmentally friendly

now there is another way of producing electricity of solar power which is a lot more efficient and cheaper (still expensive) in that route you use mirrors to redirect solar ray into a water storage and use the heat to make steam and use that steam to produce electricity ,right now anyone who want to produce electricity on industrial scale choose this method. these are some example
The PS10 and PS20 solar power plant near Seville, in Andalusia, Spain
PS20andPS10.jpg


Masdar Solar planet
masdar_solar.jpg

Gemasolar powerplanet Seville
gemasolar-2011-2_low_res.jpg

gemasolar-2011-9_low_res.jpg



and a lot more.also even there is one in USA that can produce electricity at night.
http://time.com/4291347/crescent-dunes-solar-power-plant/

Modi is lucky with good monsoon, low crude oil prices and this:


yes the price fall but until the competition in other places had to shut down then we see what happen. by the way its still more expensive than others.
 
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