Solar Philippines will showcase the country’s first solar farm
equipped with batteries when it completes the first 50 megawatts (MW) of
its largest solar project in Tarlac by mid-2017, its top official said
yesterday.
The company expects batteries to become a game changer in the solar market this year.
“Tarlac Phase 1 of 50 MW will be completed by mid-2017 and the total
150 MW are targeted by end of the year,” Solar Philippines president
Leandro Leviste said in a text message yesterday.
He said solar-plus-storage projects are already cheaper than expensive diesel and natural gas.
“Batteries will be the game-changer of 2017. We aim to complete our
first such project by mid-year to show that the age of 24/7 solar is
already here, and hopefully urge others to pause before investing in
expensive fossil fuels,” Leviste said.
Solar Philippines announced yesterday it would integrate batteries
into nearly all its upcoming solar farms, to supply reliable 24/7 power
starting this year.
It is in discussions with battery suppliers including US-based
automotive and energy storage firm Tesla, which is doubling the world’s
battery manufacturing capacity to accelerate cost decreases, and will
soon complete the world’s largest solar-plus-storage project to supply
evening power in Hawaii.
Leviste is teaming up with Tesla for a pilot solar farm with battery storage.
Red tape remains a barrier to solar-plus-storage, the company said.
The Confederation of Solar Developers of the Philippines (CSDP) noted
that around 600 signatures are required for permits to develop a solar
project resulting in a multi-year process.
According to CSDP, this has discouraged investments in renewable energy.
Another barrier is the price of solar panels, which remains the largest cost item.
Solar Philippines, however, said it would soon open the first
locally-owned solar panel factory, in line with its goal to construct
and develop solar farms in-house, to lower costs and bring greater
competition into renewable energy.
“These are exciting times in the power industry. Vertical integration
is enabling us to make solar-plus-storage cost-competitive years ahead
of schedule, accelerate the advent of sustainable energy, and make the
Philippines a leader in solar energy worldwide,” Leviste said.
source:http://www.philstar.com
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