Long popular in Asia, floating solar catches on in US

By ISABELLA O'MALLEY yesterday 
https://apnews.com/article/floating-solar-ramping-up-climate-change-renewable-energy-7316dbfe9db23363aacadcd133cbd408/

When Joe Seaman-Graves, the city planner for the working class town of Cohoes, 
New York, Googled the term “floating solar,” he didn’t even know it was a thing.

What he did know is that his tiny town needed an affordable way to get 
electricity and had no extra land. But looking at a map, one feature stood out.

“We have this 14-acre water reservoir,” he said.

Seaman-Graves soon found the reservoir could hold enough solar panels to power 
all the municipal buildings and streetlights, saving the city more than 
$500,000 each year. He had stumbled upon a form of clean energy that is steeply 
ramping up.

Floating solar panel systems are beginning to boom in the United States after 
rapid growth in Asia. They’re attractive not just for their clean power and 
lack of a land footprint, but because they also conserve water by preventing 
evaporation.

A study published in the journal Nature Sustainability in March found that 
thousands of cities -- more than 6,000 in 124 countries -- could generate an 
amount equal to all their electricity demand using floating solar, making it a 
climate solution to be taken seriously.

In the process, they could save roughly enough water each year to fill 40 
million Olympic-sized swimming pools.

Zhenzhong Zeng, a contributor on that study and associate professor at the 
Southern University of Science and Technology in Shenzhen, China, said in the 
United States, counties across Florida, Nevada, and California have the 
potential to generate more power than they use. Of course, they would need a 
mix of energy to actually provide power all hours of the day, Zeng said.

The concept of floating solar is simple: attach panels onto rafts so they float 
on water instead of blocking off land that could be used for agriculture or 
buildings. The panels are sealed and act as a lid that brings evaporation down 
to nearly zero, benefiting regions like California that repeatedly experience 
periods of drought. The water also keeps the panels cool, allowing them to 
generate more electricity than their land-mounted counterparts, which lose 
efficiency when they get too hot.

“We hear from our installers that they like it because it’s something 
different,” said Chris Bartle, director of sales and marketing for floating 
solar company Ciel & Terre, which has built 270 projects in 30 countries. “They 
get to go out on the water as opposed to on a rooftop. We joke that you need 
life jackets instead of ladders,” he said. Bartle’s company has launched 28 
floating solar projects in the U.S.

Limited land may have spurred some countries in Asia like Japan and Malaysia to 
expand floating solar, and other countries just took advantage of the steep 
plunge in prices for solar that has dramatically changed the economic picture 
for solar adoption globally.

A report by London-based Fairfield Market Research says the region currently 
accounts for 73% of revenue from floating solar and “spearheads the global 
landscape,” but predicts that policy incentives in North America and Europe 
will spur significant growth.

One of the biggest floating solar farms in the U.S. is the 4.8 MW project in 
Healdsburg, California, built by Ciel & Terre.

“It’s funny, I don’t think a lot of people in Healdsburg know about it,” said 
David Hargreaves, a local realtor and YouTuber who lives nearby. People may not 
know that solar panels can be placed on water, so they don’t look out for it, 
he said.

The world’s largest array so far is the 320 MW Dezhou Dingzhuang Floating Solar 
Farm in Shandong, China. North America’s largest, by comparison, is a fraction 
of that — 8.9 MW at the Canoe Brook Water Treatment Plant in Millburn, N.J., 
owned by New Jersey Resources Clean Energy Ventures, which operates 
utility-scale commercial as well as residential solar systems across the 
Northeast.

“We’re excited to see it start gaining traction in the US,” said Robert 
Pohlman, vice president of NJRCEV.

But high up costs up front remain a barrier. Bartle estimates floating solar 
costs 10-15% more than land solar initially, but owners save money in the long 
run. Deeper water can increase installation costs, and the technology can’t 
operate on fast-moving water, on the open ocean, or shorelines with large waves.

Engineers are working on other challenges. If the solar panels cover too much 
of a water body’s surface, dissolved oxygen levels could change and water 
temperature will drop, which could harm aquatic life. Researchers are looking 
into whether the electromagnetic fields generated by cables could negatively 
influence aquatic ecosystems, however, there’s no evidence of that yet.

Duke Energy, the large U.S. utility that owns some 50,000 MW of energy 
capacity, is aiming to achieve net zero carbon emissions from electricity 
production by 2050. It just launched a small floating solar pilot, just shy of 
1 MW in Bartow, Florida.

“The favorite part of my job is that I get to come out here,” said Tommy Oneal, 
an environmental specialist at Duke Energy, as he gestured towards new panels 
floating on top of the cooling pond of an adjacent gas power plant.

“I see eagles, alligators, and all kinds of cool stuff ... It’s fun, these 
issues make my job different every day. When I went to college, I never thought 
I’d be dealing with alligator issues,” said Oneal.

An array of solar panels float on top of a water storage pond in Sayreville, 
N.J., Monday, April 10, 2023. Floating solar panel farms are beginning to boom 
in the United States after rapid growth in Asia. They're attractive not just 
for their clean power and lack of a land footprint, but because they also 
conserve water by preventing evaporation. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
An array of solar panels float on top of a water storage pond in Sayreville, 
N.J., Monday, April 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

In Cohoes, public officials are preparing for the installation of their project 
later this year at an estimated final cost of $6.5 million. The federal 
government is paying almost half of that through a federal Housing and Urban 
Development grant. Another $750,000 is covered by the utility National Grid. 
The city is also looking into New York solar incentives and the Inflation 
Reduction Act.

As far as he knows, Seaman-Graves said, it’s is the first municipally-owned 
floating solar project in the country.


“We are an environmental justice community and we see a big opportunity for low 
to moderate income cities to replicate what we’re doing,” he said.

___

Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from 
several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The 
AP is solely responsible for all content.

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