
Europe's Largest Solar Power Plant
to Open in Ukraine
Aug. 10, 2011 - prnewswire.com
By the end of the current year the newly built
solar power plant in Crimea is set to reach the production
rate of 100,000 megawatt-hours of electricity in
a year. This rate makes the station the most powerful
solar power plant ever built in the region and one
of the largest solar power plants in the world. The
power plant of this caliber is estimated to reduce
Ukraine's carbon dioxide emission by 80,000 tons.
The solar power plant in Okhotnykovo, Crimea, is
a part of the country's national Natural Energy project.
The State Agency of Ukraine for Energy Efficiency
and Energy Conservation (SAUEEEC) launched the project
in 2010. It is aimed at producing electric energy
from the "clean" sources - the sun and
the wind - in the amount of 2,000 MW. The objective
of this initiative is to supply the low transportation
cost electricity and preserve the environment. The
SAUEEEC expects the production share of alternative
energy to make up to 30 percent of Ukrainian energy
market before 2015.
The Okhotnykovo plant will provide an output of 80
MW making it the largest solar power plant in Europe.
Currently, the largest solar power plant is located
in Italy and produces 72 MW.
After the construction of the remaining two out of
four power production lines is finished, the area
of the power station will equal 207 football fields.
The power plant will provide green energy for around
20,000 households.
Kaveh Ertefai, the CEO of the Austrian company "Activ
Solar" responsible for the project, said: "Project
of this scale means a radical change of solar energy
development in Europe, while securing Ukraine's position
as renewable energy provider."
Ukraine funds its energy saving projects by the profits
the government receives from selling CO2 quotes under
the Kyoto protocol. In 2009, having traded its CO2
emission quota to Japan Ukraine received almost USD
400 mln from Japan.
The amount of solar radiation in Ukraine reaches
from 800 to 1450 W/m² per year and provides
for an expansive potential market of solar energy
projects. As of 2009, Ukraine is the twelfth largest
energy market in the world with an installed capacity
of 54 GW. Ukraine exports its excess electricity
to Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Russia, and
Slovakia.
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