India-headquartered  module manufacturer Vikram Solar has successfully completed the installation and  grid connection of the country’s first floating PV power  plant.
The  R&D installation has been developed in collaboration with the Arka Renewable  Energy College in Kolkata with the aim to create solar PV system that is  suitable for connection to any body of water.
The  Vikram Solar installation produces a minimum power generation of 14 MWh/year  from its 10 x 1 kW fiberglass modules and has been securely anchored to the lake  bed, which is located in Kolkata’s New Town area.  Vikram Solar also  confirmed that the installation has been designed to last 25 years and is  grid-connected via a submersible cable.
"The  project underlines Vikram Solar’s strong track record and efforts to make solar  energy available everywhere and for everyone – even in the remotest and most  challenging environments, such as water," said Vikram Solar’s head of business  development and engineering, Miguel Monsalve.
According  to Gon Chaudhuri, former MD of West Bengal Renewable Energy Development Agency  (WBREDA) and former advisor to the Indian state power department, the project  has already attracted keen interest from ministers and  engineers.
"A  team of experts is coming from Lakshadweep to take a look at the project, as a  similar project will be undertaken up there," said Chaudhuri. "Land is required  for setting up any power plant, but a floating solar panel doesn’t require any  land since it is set up on a water body."
Japan  – which has pioneered floating solar PV projects due to acute land shortages –  leads the way in this field. In 2013 French EPC Ciel et Terre installed a 1.2 MW  floating installation in Okegawa, and the company is also involved in a  groundbreaking (not literally, though) 13.4 MW floating PV project penciled in  for Japan’s Yamakura Dam.
This  project will see Ciel et Terre attach 50,000 Kyocera modules to its patented  Hydraulic floating platforms, with a completion date scheduled for March 2016.  Once completed it will be the world’s largest floating PV installation for just  a few months – California’s Sonoma County is expected to have a 15 MW project  up-and-running by fall 2016.
 
                     
                    
                  
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