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China ranks first worldwide in PV power capacity

The American regime just can't help twisting a possible solution to a serious problem and making in passing incredulous deductions and accusations。:rofl:

China wants a massive solar-powered space laser

By: Joshua Philipp | OFweek | Posted: 01 Apr 2015, 15:20

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Chinese researchers are proposing a trillion-dollar solar space-based power station, which will beam its electricity to a collector on Earth using microwaves or lasers, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported on March 30. While billed as a power station, analysts believe this station is in fact meant to be a space weapon.

The proposed space power station, which Xinhua describes as “a super spacecraft on a geosynchronous orbit equipped with huge solar panels,” would be around twice the size of New York’s Central Park.

“If realized, it will surpass the scale of the Apollo project and the International Space Station, and be the largest-ever space project,” Xinhua states.

While the technology may sound a bit far-out, the Chinese regime activated and began funding the program in 2010, according to a report from the China Academy of Space Technology.

“Whoever obtains the technology first could occupy the future energy market. So it’s of great strategic significance,” said Wang Xiji, the principle spokesman for the project, and a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, according to Xinhua.

Wang had previously said, according to a report released by WikiLeaks, that the power plant could generate up to 100MW of electricity, with its size “dwarfing the International Space Station and becoming the biggest man-made object in space.”

A 2011 report from China’s Guangming Daily estimates the project will cost up to $1 trillion.

Military Threat

The station’s proposed laser and microwave systems have military capabilities that fit perfectly with the Chinese regime’s secretive Assassin’s Mace program, a set of strategies meant to allow China to defeat a technologically superior enemy, the United States.

Both microwave and laser technology can be used as anti-satellite weapons, or as weapons to jam electronics and missile defense systems.

A report released in September 2010 from the U.S. National Ground Intelligence Center warns of China’s Assassin’s Mace and “Trump Card” weapons. It states they include technology for jamming communications, using high-powered microwave weapons to disable missile systems, and other technology to destroy electronics in large areas.

The Chinese regime’s space-based solar power plant “is an idea that has been bouncing around over there for some time,” said Richard Fisher, senior fellow, Asian Military Affairs International Assessment and Strategy Center, in a phone interview.

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“U.S. officials have told me that, yes, you take this thing and turn it horizontally, then you could have a very powerful weapon,” Fisher said, noting “any network of space solar systems that China may build will be done with the real potential for military benefits.”

“This is a very serious pursuit by China,” he said, noting that while the West has been mulling over similar concepts for decades, the Chinese regime is able to move enough funds to actually build such a system.

Fisher added that once completed, the program will very likely end up under the Chinese regime’s military, the People’s Liberation Army.

A Long-Term Goal

Discussions on the technology started with a 1968 article in the journal Science from U.S. scientist Peter Gleason, who proposed a design for a space-based solar power station.

The idea is that while solar panels on Earth get fluctuating sunlight each day, a space-based system would get almost constant sunlight. Xinhua reports the panels could gather up to 10 times more energy than those on Earth.

In 2010, the Chinese regime had “decided that power coming from outside of the earth, such as solar power and development of other space energy resources, is to be China’s future direction,” according to a report from the China Academy of Space Technology.

It adds that space-based solar power and the development of solar-power satellites are among the “‘outside’ approaches currently under development in China.”

A design for a space-based solar power station was “activated, approved, and funded by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology” in 2010, soon after researchers submitted a proposal to the Chinese regime, according to the report.

The program has a long development cycle. The report estimates that in 2020 testing a system in-orbit will begin, and in 2025 the first demonstration will be completed.

They estimate the system will be able to generate electricity by 2035, and will be commercially viable by 2050.

Among the biggest hurdles is the fact that China does not currently have the technology needed for the program. The Chinese regime will need thinner solar panels, and a launcher capable of carrying a payload of more than 100 tons into orbit.

In order for the station to function as a power station, the laser or microwave technology will need to be able to beam energy to Earth while losing less than half during transmission, a capability that doesn’t currently exist.
Sounds like the" Icarus", used in James Bond movie - Die Another Day. :devil:
icarus.jpg
 
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Can this solar power station be further integrated with space weapon?
 
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China to put huge solar power station above Earth by 2050
by Felix Balthasar, Mar 31, 2015

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China is planning to set massive solar power station in the sky by 2050. The scientists behind the vision mentioned that the solar power station would be bigger than the International Space Station (ISS) and would be built 36,000 kilometers above the ground.

The advocate for the station will be a 93-year-old academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences named Wang Xiji. He is also an International Academy of Astronautics member and has devoted over 50 years to space technology research.

According to Wang, the huge solar power station is meant to solve entire energy crisis and will also save the planet from greenhouse gases and pollution.

However, the project is too huge and is surpassing the known mega-projects like the US Apollo project or the US-Russian joint project, the ISS.

The solar power station will be so huge that it may look like a super spacecraft on a geosynchronous orbit with its solar panels extending more than 6 kilometers in length each.

Scientists explained that the energy stored by the solar panels will be converted to microwaves or lasers and transmitted to a collector on Earth.

The other factor is weight of the space power station, which would be in the range of 10,000 tons. With such weight, an asteroid would be required to carry it into space.

Wang said, "We need a cheap heavy-lift launch vehicle. We also need to make very thin and light solar panels. The weight of the panel must be less than 200 grams per square meter".

He added that when space solar energy would become the main energy, people will no longer worry about smog or the greenhouse effect.
 
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China's first biomass-solar power plant begins initial operation
Source: Xinhua Published: 2015-4-2

China's first power plant producing electricity both from biomass power generation and photovoltaic power generation started its first phase operation on Thursday.

The Zhejiang Longquan Biomass Power Plant in east China's Zhejiang Province began operating its two biomass power generators, which boast a total installed capacity of producing 162 million kilowatt-hours of electricity a year.

To reach the capacity, the generators need to consume 250,000 tonnes of biomass fuel, which is processed from rural waste.

The plant will see the installation of its 1.44-megawatt photovoltaic power generation system later this month. It is expected to go into operation 4 months later. The solar power generation is able to add 1.3 million kilowatt-hours of electricity a year to the power grid, which is equivalent to the thermal power generation of burning 430 tonnes of coal.

On Thursday, Ji Maoqing, a farmer from Longquan City, Zhejiang, sent a truck of saw dust to the power plant. After going under scalage, the waste earn him 1,500 yuan (242 US dollars).

Saw dust, along with straw and other agricultural waste, is the main raw material that the plant purchases from farmers to fuel the biomass power generation.

If recycled, rural waste has the potential to produce the biomass energy equivalent to thermal power generation from 656 million tonnes of coal a year, or half of the country's annual coal output.
 
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China & Japan to lead global solar boom in 2015 - Bloomberg — RT Business

Global solar panel production is expected to grow by almost a third this year which would be industry’s the best performance since 2011. China will take the lead, producing more than 75 percent of the world’s panels.

Japan will be the second largest producer and install up to 12.7 gigawatts of solar power in 2015, according to a Bloomberg survey published Tuesday. The country has been advocating greater use of renewable energy since the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011.

Headed by Trina Solar Ltd., Chinese manufacturers expect to produce 55 gigawatts of panels this year, enough to power 11 million US homes and 31 percent more than last year.

In November 2014 Chinese President Xi Jinping signed a deal with US President Barack Obama to increase the non-fossil fuel share of energy production to around 20 percent by 2030. To reach the target the Chinese government scaled up its plan for 2015 domestic solar installations by 5.8 gigawatts to 17.8 gigawatts.

With the cost of production down 66 percent since 2010 the demand for solar panels started growing. In 2015 solar technology is able to compete on price with fossil fuels for the first time.

Panel production has had a hard time since 2011 when US manufacturer Solyndra failed to compete with Chinese products. After $528 million in investment the company realized it couldn’t compete as Chinese capacity surged and prices fell.

In 2007 and 2008 Chinese companies including JA Solar Holdings Co. and LDK Solar Co. raised almost $3 billion to expand production. This resulted in the industry’s excess capacity and oversupply in 2010.
“It’s night and day how different the industry is now than it was three years ago,” Patrick Jobin, analyst at Credit Suisse Bloomberg in a phone interview.

In 2015, NYSE Bloomberg Global Solar Energy Index of 132 companies gained 65 percent, outpacing the 3.4 percent gain for the S&P 500.
 
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China to install 55GW.
Japan to install 12GW.

Now, who has the biggest solar market? Yup!

So, why is Japan compared to China?Japan CANNOT compete with China.

I think this is to compare China and Japan with the the rest of the world rather than comparing the two. Although Japan is one fourth of China, it is still the second largest as far as the proposed 2015 solar energy installation.

I guess this is good news for both nations and indicate the importance they give to cleaner and safer sources of energy.
 
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I think this is to compare Chin and Japan the the rest of the world rather than comparing the two. Although Japan is one fourth of China, it is still the second largest as far as the proposed 2015 solar energy installation.

I guess this is good news for both nations and indicate the importance they give to cleaner and safer sources of energy.

True. Just shows how big China's market is doesn't it. Japan is 2nd, yet it's way behind China.
 
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China has begun construction on its largest solar power plant which, when completed, will be capable of powering one million homes and will drastically reduce the country's coal use.

The plant will cover 2,550 hectares (nearly 10 square miles) in the Gobi desert, in Qinghai province.

It will have an installed capacity of 200 megawatts, and be capable of supplying electricity to one million households, according to Qinghai Solar-Thermal Power Group.

"Its designed heat storage is 15 hours, thus, it can guarantee stable, continual power generation," state-owned news agency Xinhua quoted group board chair Wu Longyi as saying.

Once operational, the plant will slash standard coal use by 4.26 million tons every year, reducing emissions of carbon dioxide and sulphur dioxide by 896,000 tons and 8,080 tons, respectively.

The solar power tower system boasts higher efficiency and better energy storage than the more commonly used trough system.

The plant will also be China's first large-scale solar power plant under commercial operation, said Yu Mingzhen, vice director of Qinghai development and reform commission.

Beijing has been emphasizing clean energy. Between 2005 and 2014, the country has increased its solar power capacity 400 fold to 28.05 gigawatts. There are plans to increase capacity to around 100 gigawatts by 2020.

China also has plans to construct a new 50-megawatt solar power plant in Datong City, Shanxi Province.



Read more: China Starts Building Huge Solar Plant to Span 10 Sq. Miles of Gobi Desert / Sputnik International
 
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China’s largest concentrated solar power tower plant starts construction with 200 MW
July 22, 2015

Construction has begun on China’s largest concentrated solar power tower plant in the northwestern province of Qinghai. Occupying 2,550 hectares of the Gobi Desert in Golmud City, the CSP plant will have an installed capacity of 200 megawatts, and be capable of supplying electricity to 1 million households, according to Qinghai Solar-Thermal Power Group.

Didn't know Huawei was also big in the PV market。:enjoy:

Huawei, Panasonic subsidiary cooperate in Southeast Asia

By: Vincent Shaw | pv-magazine | Posted: 24 Jul 2015, 09:37

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Southeast Asia’s emerging PV markets are to see the introduction of Huawei’s intelligent power electronic components in PV arrays. Malaysia-based Panasonic Eco Solutions will partner with the Chinese electronics giant to deliver ‘smart PV power ‘ to Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, and Myanmar.

A subsidiary of Panasonic Group, PESMY is an environmental services company specializing in in solar energy, waste water recycling, and polluted soil remediation.

PESMY believes the cooperation with Huawei to rollout smart PV solutions will be mutually beneficial for the two companies.

The cooperation will see Huawei provide project design services, field installation, operation and maintenance including remote support, hardware support and solution support, besides necessary personal training, technical, business development and after-market service. PESMY will provide field service and failure feedback for Huawei’s smart PV system.

Huawei announced earlier this year that in 2014 it had shipped approximately 4 GW of inverters and had an order volume in excess of 5.5 GW. If accurate, this means that the diversified electronics company is snapping at the heals of Chinese inverter specialist Sungrow.

The cooperation with PESMY, announced this week, will presumably help Huawei to enter the rapidly emerging and promising Southeast Asian PV markets, in which many Chinese inverter suppliers have had limited support in the past.
 
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Pakistan: Building the world's largest solar farm

Thu, 10 Sep 2015 00:00 UTC

Pakistan putting the sun to work.

China is helping Pakistan build the largest solar farm in the world. The Chinese company Xinjiang SunOasis took only three months to install a 100-Megawatt (MW), 400,000-panel pilot power project—marking the first solar power plant in Pakistan. The plant started selling electricity to the grid last month, according to China Dialogue. When complete in 2017, the solar farm could have 5.2 million photovoltaic cells, producing as much as 1,000 MW of electricity.

The Quaid-e-Azam Solar Power Park is a $130 million project on nearly 500 acres of land in the Cholistan desert in Punjab. And it's just the first part of a larger project, the $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. When the entire project is complete in 2017, the site could have 5.2 million photovoltaic cells, "producing as much as 1,000 MW of electricity—equivalent to an average sized coal-fired power station—and enough to power about 320,000 households," says China Dialogue.

The area's 13 hours of daily sunlight and its flat expanse of desert make it ideal for a solar farm. "The solar park will also shrink Pakistan's carbon footprint," Najam Ahmed Shah, the chief executive of the solar park, told China Dialogue, "displacing about 57,500 tonnes of coal burn and reducing emissions by 90,750 tonnes every year."
 
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The Pakistanis cannot show enough gratitude to our Chinese friends and their invaluable help in every field and sector. Such direly needed energy projects definitely help the ordinary person in Pakistan.
 
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