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Why we should be putting solar panels on our fields and lakes
yewtu.beOn our way to an emissions-neutral future the use of solar energy is crucial. The problem: the space for photovoltaic systems is getting tight. We need land for food, for housing, to preserve biodiversity. So where to go with the solar cells?
Credits:
Reporter: Monika Sax
Video Editors: Philipp Czegka, Frederik Willmann
Supervising Editors: Kiyo Dörrer, Malte Rohwer-Kahlmann
We're destroying our environment at an alarming rate. But it doesn't need to be this way. Our new channel Planet A explores the shift towards an eco-friendly world — and challenges our ideas about what dealing with climate change means. We look at the big and the small: What we can do and how the system needs to change. Every Friday we'll take a truly global look at how to get us out of this mess.
#PlanetA #Agrivoltaics #Floatovoltaics
Read more:
Outlook for the industry:https://www.solarpowereurope.org/insights/market-outlooks/global-market-outlook-for-solar-power-2022
Integrated Photovoltaics – Areas for the Energy Transformation: https://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/en/key-topics/integrated-photovoltaics.html
Space Energy Initiative: https://spaceenergyinitiative.org.uk/
Author would like to thank (for research support and background information):
Greg Barron-Gafford, University of Arizona, https://www.barrongafford.org
Dr. Thomas Reindl, Solar Energy Research Institute of Singapore, https://www.seris.nus.edu.sg
Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE, https://agri-pv.org/en/
Tim Pinguin, The Space Energy Initiative, UK
Laura Dijksma and Gerjan Wubs, Groenleven, NL
Tanja Göller, Next2Sun, Germany
Børge Bjørneklett, Ocean Sun, Norway
Archanaa Nivruthaa Raja, Sembcorp Industries, Singapore
Chapters:
00:00 Intro
01:23 Introducing Agrivoltaics
03:16 Photovoltaics place in agriculture
05:48 Taking the plunge with Floatovoltaics
09:57 Environmental impacts of floating solar
11:35 Solar power from space
14:20 Conclusion
Just put them on roofs. The article talks about saving the environment and then building over it. Let’s just build on top of current infrastructure. But I guess it’s harder to profit off of a more decentralized strategy so we’ll probably just keep destroying the environment.
Most of the environment is destroyed for farming anyway. If people ate slightly less meat then you could fit all the solar panels on the saved farmland and still plant trees.
Rooftop solar just adds complication and cost.