Most solar
farms align their solar arrays in rows and columns to form a grid.
A new solar
power plant in Datong, China, however, decided to have a little fun with its
design. China Merchants New Energy Group, one of the country's largest clean
energy operators, built a 248-acre solar farm in the shape of a giant panda.
The first
phase, which includes one 50-megawatt plant, was completed on June 30,
according to PV magazine. The project just began delivering power to a grid in
northwestern China, and a second panda is planned for later this year.
Called the
Panda Power Plant, it will be able to produce 3.2 billion kilowatt-hours of
solar energy in 25 years, according to the company. That will eliminate
approximately million tons of coal that would have been used to produce
electricity, reducing carbon emissions by 2.74 million tons.
The Panda
Power Plant in Datong, China will stretch 1,500 acres when complete. China
Merchants New Energy/Panda Green Energy
China
Merchants New Energy Group worked with the United Nations Development Program
(UNDP) to make the Panda Power Plant a reality. The project is part of a larger
effort to raise awareness among young people in China about clean energy, the
UNDP wrote in a statement.
The groups
hope to build more panda-shaped solar plants throughout China in the next five
years.
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