1st airport in world to go 100% solar is in India

CleanTechnica

Cochin International Airport Limited in Kochi, Kerala (India) has become the first airport in the world to be powered entirely by solar power. A 12 MW solar PV plant, spread over 50 acres, was inaugurated two days back near the airport’s cargo complex.

The power plant took 6 months to complete and has come up at a cost of  ₹620 million ($9.5 million).

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Technically speaking, the airport is now grid neutral, as it will give back more than it consumes from the grid. The newly installed solar power plant can generate between 50,000 to 60,000 kWh per day.

The airport has another 1 MW solar PV plant in addition to a smaller grid-connected 100 kW rooftop system, both of which were installed in 2013.

The electricity generated from the system will be fed into the power grid and the airport will use equivalent power from the utility. The plant is expected to produce much more than what the airport would consume, and for this purpose a PPA has been signed with Kerala State Electricity Board to sell any surplus power.

The 12 MW system was executed by Bosch’s Energy and Building Solutions team in India. This is the largest project for the company to date.

About a year back, the Indira Gandhi International Airport at Delhi took the solar plunge with a 2.14 MW plant.

Incidentally, the combined capacity of solar installations at Cochin Airport (12+1.1 MW) is more than the solar PV system installed at the Indianapolis International Airport, which holds the record for world’s largest solar plant at an airport. However, to be fair, Indianapolis has a single 12.5 MW ground-mounted system.

According to the German company Enerparc, which had commissioned the Delhi system, the only special requirement for putting up a solar plant at an airport is the glare analysis for the solar panels. Solar glare is a concern among pilots, but technology advancements have led to a substantive reduction in the reflective index of panels.

Kolkata’s Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport, which seems to be the next in line to install a MW-scale solar plant, is said to have sanctioned a 2 MW solar PV unit. Though, if the media reports are to be believed, the airport is eyeing a 15 MW ground-mounted solar power plant over 60 acres of land.

The Airport Authority of India (AAI), which operates 125 airports across the country, including the Cochin and Kolkata airports, has decided to build solar power plants at about 30 of its airports.

AAI has plans to install 50 MW capacity plants in the first phase (by 2016), which would be enhanced to 150 MW over a period of time. The plants would be established on surplus land available at these identified airports or on the large rooftops of the airport structures.

A MoU was signed between AAI and Solar Energy Corporation Of India (SECI) for construction of these solar plants.

India has 136 airports, some of which are spread over vast pieces of land. For example, the Hyderabad International Airport is spread over 5,400 acres, while the one at Chennai sits over 4,000 acres. Large-scale solar plants are possible on many of these. The one at Hyderabad, for instance, can house a 25 MW system.

Photo Credit: 12 MW Solar Plant at Cochin International Airport via official website

Source: CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

5 responses to “1st airport in world to go 100% solar is in India”

  1. john Avatar
    john

    Interesting that India can just get in and do this and why?
    As pointed out they have a large land area around the airports to utilise.
    No doubt India is moving ahead with RE on a pretty large scale in all areas.
    It is interesting to see that the high tech areas like airports are being upgraded but more of interest is the low tech areas where large PV and RE installations are being installed.
    Joint agreements to manufacture and install PV are being put in place.
    Yes small steps however it seems they do have a handle on which way is the best way to move forward and more strength to them I say.

    1. mick Avatar
      mick

      short answer modi saw him speak smart responsible bloke

  2. Tim Buckley Avatar
    Tim Buckley

    Given Indian plans to install 100GW of solar by 2021/22, we should expect to read of many more Indian solar records being set in the next 1-2 years. I note with interest the time to install of six months – a tenth of the time to install a coal-fired power plant in India. Also, with distributed solar now priced at below industrial and commercial wholesale prices of electricity, the economic incentive is immediate. Solar is also deflationary, an added bonus, particularly in India.

    The clear loser in this Indian transition is expensive imported thermal coal.

    It seems entirely fitting that the Abbot/ Hockey government today announced new plans to subsidise the opening up of the Galilee thermal coal basin in Queensland with a huge taxpayer gift to a foreign private billionaire. The Abbot government trying ineffectively to prop up a sunset industry in structural decline as Prime Minister Modi builds the Indian solar industry. Ironic that if Abbott is successful, he will flood the market with more export coal and crush the coal price, killing off existing Australian coal mines.

    1. Kevin Jackson Avatar
      Kevin Jackson

      Fortunatly, the Indian government didn’t slap a huge tariff on imported solar panels as the US government did.

  3. sunoba Avatar
    sunoba

    These are astonishing numbers from the Cochin Airport installation. With my (tough) standard methodology, I make the LCOE to be INR 4,034 per MWh, equivalent to USD 62 per MWh at current exchange rates. This is way better than my previous best LCOE estimate of USD 110 per MWh for the Amanecer installation in Chile. I’ve now analysed nearly 60 solar installations around the world, and the Cochin Airport installation has easily the best LCOE. Details at http://www.sunoba.blogspot.com (post for 25 August 2015).

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