‘Limitless’ energy: how floating solar panels near the equator could power future population hotspots

Vast arrays of solar panels floating on calm seas near the Equator could provide effectively unlimited solar energy to densely populated countries in Southeast Asia and West Africa.

Our new research shows offshore solar in Indonesia alone could generate about 35,000 terawatt-hours (TWh) of solar energy a year, which is similar to current global electricity production (30,000TWh per year).

And while most of the world’s oceans experience storms, some regions at the Equator are relatively still and peaceful. So relatively inexpensive engineering structures could suffice to protect offshore floating solar panels.

Our high-resolution global heat maps show the Indonesian archipelago and equatorial West Africa near Nigeria have the greatest potential for offshore floating solar arrays.




file-20230801-20-dkpvgr.png

Heatmap for offshore floating solar panels. Red areas are best, followed by yellow, green and dark blue. The grey lines show tropical storm tracks. Author-supplied, using OpenStreetMap base, CC BY-ND



Solar power rules by mid-century​

On current trends, the global economy will be largely decarbonised and electrified by 2050, supported by vast amounts of solar and wind energy.

About 70 square kilometres of solar panels can provide all the energy requirements of a million affluent people in a zero-carbon economy. The panels can be placed on rooftops, in arid areas, colocated with agriculture, or floated on water bodies.

But countries with high population densities, such as Nigeria and Indonesia, will have limited space for solar energy harvesting.

Their tropical location in the so-called “doldrum” latitudes also means wind resources are poor. Fortunately, these countries – and their neighbours – can harvest effectively unlimited energy from solar panels floating on calm equatorial seas.

Floating solar panels can also be placed on inland lakes and reservoirs. Inland floating solar has large potential and is already growing rapidly.

Our recently released paper surveys the global oceans to find regions that didn’t experience large waves or strong winds over the past 40 years. Floating solar panels in such regions do not require strong and expensive engineering defences.

Regions that don’t experience waves larger than 6 metres nor winds stronger than 15m per second could generate up to one million TWh per year. That’s about five times more annual energy than is needed for a fully decarbonised global economy supporting 10 billion affluent people.

Most of the good sites are close to the Equator, in and around Indonesia and equatorial west Africa. These are regions of high population growth and high environmental values. Marine floating solar panels could help resolve land use conflict.



Indonesia has vast solar energy potential​

Indonesia is a densely populated country, particularly on the islands of Java, Bali and Sumatra. By mid-century, Indonesia’s population may exceed 315 million people.

Fortunately, Indonesia has vast solar energy potential and also vast pumped hydro energy storage potential to store the solar energy overnight.

About 25,000 square km of solar panels would be required to support an affluent Indonesia after full decarbonisation of the economy using solar power.

Indonesia has the option of floating vast numbers of solar panels on its calm inland seas. The region has about 140,000 square km of seascape that has not experienced waves larger than 4m – nor winds stronger than 10m per second – in the past 40 years.

Indonesia’s maritime area of 6.4 million square km is 200 times larger than required if Indonesia’s entire future energy needswere met from offshore floating solar panels.


file-20230801-23-ko6dda.png

Heatmap for offshore floating solar panels in Indonesia. Red areas are best, followed by yellow, green and dark blue. The grey lines show tropical storm tracks. Author-supplied, using OpenStreetMap base, CC BY-ND



The future for offshore floating solar​

Most of the global seascape experiences waves larger than 10m and winds stronger than 20m per second. Several companies are working to develop engineering defences so offshore floating panels can tolerate storms. In contrast, benign maritime environments along the equator require much less robust and expensive defences.

We have found the most suitable regions cluster within 5–12 degrees of latitude of the Equator, principally in and around the Indonesian archipelago and in the Gulf of Guinea near Nigeria. These regions have low potential for wind generation, high population density, rapid growth (in both population and energy consumption) and substantial intact ecosystems that should not be cleared for solar farms. Tropical storms rarely impact equatorial regions.

The offshore floating solar industry is in its infancy. Offshore solar panels do have downsides compared with onshore panels, including salt corrosion and marine fouling. Shallow seas are preferred for anchoring the panels to the seabed. And careful attention must be paid to minimising damage to the marine environment and fishing. Global warming may also alter wind and wave patterns. Despite these challenges, we believe offshore floating panels will provide a large component of the energy mix for countries with access to calm equatorial seas. By mid-century, about a billion people in these countries will rely mostly on solar energy, which is causing the fastest energy change in history.

This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by Andrew Blakers, Professor of Engineering, Australian National University, David Firnando Silalahi, Phd Candidate, School of Engineering, Australian National University

 
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Great! But the burning question is the cabling to transfer the power generated to locations that need it. There's many billions of dollars just there! You can't "beam" electricity like radio waves!

And don't forget the hazards to shipping. Looking at that map, any oceangoing vessel would become a dodgem car.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Jest
Quote: "About 70 square kilometres of solar panels can provide all the energy requirements of a million affluent people in a zero-carbon economy." Unquote.

That equates to 70 square metres of panel per person.
That, in turn, equates to about 50 X 10 to the 16th Power as the number of panels required to 'Save the Planet'...... or a truly Brobdignagian number of panels to be exported, presumably by sea (if the ships can penetrate the Floating Arrays - would make Titanic vs Iceberg look petty!) from Chi-na. How much child labour will be required to extract the (increasingly) Rare Earths required for manufacture?
Have these Academics been smoking something they oughtn't?"

I haven't even mentioned Tsunamis......
 
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Reactions: Veggiepatch
If you believe this BS from MORON Nigel about floating solar or windyurbines if you are good expect delivery 24 th December or if you need it now get some teeth removed for the tooth fairy.An article on floating wind turbines Norway is in the process but only has 7 or 8 in place but NIGEL that is no problem just needs steel production to increase dramatically but that takes reliable energy COAL.Cannot use that being sold to Chine and India to propup the ALP budget deficit being used in the Northern Hemisphe doesnot pollute Southern Hemisphere that makes it ok.Commonsense out the door from these morons.
 
"+Indonesia is a densely populated country, particularly on the islands of Java, Bali and Sumatra. By mid-century, Indonesia’s population may exceed 315 million people."

People need to curb down their breeding habits or the world will be destroyed by human pollution.
 
Several years ago, I determined how much land area would be required to generate Germany's energy requirements via the most efficient industrial solar panelling available at the time. That includes domestic, commercial and industrial energy requirements as of 2018.

Lo and behold! Germany would have enough land left over to house its population, the transport network, commercial and industrial infrastructure. Less than 200 sq km of its 357000 sq km total area...a staggering 0.06% of Germany's space would NOT be consumed by solar panels!

What a great idea!! :ROFLMAO:
 
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I am all for renewables including the govt of the day
I am all for solar power panels and battery too if not sold by shysters
However I not believe that there should ever be 100% usage of renewables
Australia is rich in coal, uranium, gas etc and we should use what we have for oursleves first before exporting to countries which have no regard what they do with it
PLUS

I am all for Nucelar Energy to power our country called Australia
Australia has the right resources and unfortunately not the right govt that makes promises they wont keep.
 
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Reactions: Abby2 and Bill MacL
I am all for renewables including the govt of the day
I am all for solar power panels and battery too if not sold by shysters
However I not believe that there should ever be 100% usage of renewables
Australia is rich in coal, uranium, gas etc and we should use what we have for oursleves first before exporting to countries which have no regard what they do with it
PLUS

I am all for Nucelar Energy to power our country called Australia
Australia has the right resources and unfortunately not the right govt that makes promises they wont keep.

I am all for renewables including the govt of the day. Brilliant!
 
The Chinese lithium battery industry has a lot to answer for. Their mining operations would have be the dirtiest in the world. Rivers full of toxins and dead fish with the occasional cow or yak bobbing in the scum that served as its source of life.

Now look at Columbia, a major lithium producer in its own right. For every tonne of lithium produced, 500000 litres of water is used in its extraction. Being an arid region already, the local farming industry has been decimated due a significantly dropping water table.

Elon Musk can die on a rope. Megalomaniac fruitcake.
 
  • Sad
Reactions: Abby2
I am all for renewables including the govt of the day
I am all for solar power panels and battery too if not sold by shysters
However I not believe that there should ever be 100% usage of renewables
Australia is rich in coal, uranium, gas etc and we should use what we have for oursleves first before exporting to countries which have no regard what they do with it
PLUS

I am all for Nucelar Energy to power our country called Australia
Australia has the right resources and unfortunately not the right govt that makes promises they wont keep.
...but do you reaaaalllly want to renew them?
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Veggiepatch

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