Critics
have panned the Ashalim solar tower project as too expensive and complex
compared to other renewable energy solutions ©Jak Guez (AFP)
|
In the middle of southern Israel's desert,
engineers are hard at work building the world's tallest solar tower, reflecting
the country's high hopes for renewable energy.
Once completed in late 2017, the Ashalim Tower
will rise to 240 metres (787 feet), taller than Paris's Montparnasse Tower and
London's Gherkin, according to the Israeli government and the consortium
building it.
Covered in stainless steel, the square tower in
the rocky Negev desert with a peak resembling a giant lighthouse will be
visible from dozens of kilometres (miles) away.
A field of mirrors covering 300 hectares (740
acres) -- the size of more than 400 football pitches -- will stretch out from
its base, directing sunlight toward the tower's peak to an area called the
boiler, which looks like a giant lightbulb.
The boiler, whose temperature will rise to 600
degrees Celsius (1112 Fahrenheit), generates steam that is channelled towards
the foot of the tower, where electricity is produced.
The construction, costing an estimated €500
million (US$570 million), is being financed by US firm General Electric, with
France's Alstom and Israeli private investment fund Noy also involved.
Israel's government launched a tender for the
project in 2013, committing to purchase electricity from it over 25 years as
part of a shift towards renewable energy and energy independence.
- Clean at a cost -
The country mainly generates electricity using
plants fired by coal, natural gas and fuel oil. Its domestic supply of natural
gas has grown with the discovery of fields in the Mediterranean.
Solar requires a major investment, though costs
are gradually coming down.
Energy from a solar tower is "two to three
times more expensive to produce than classic electricity plants using carbon or
fuel", said Eran Gartner, who heads the Megalim consortium managing the
project.
The tower should provide 121 megawatts, or two
percent of Israel's electricity needs, enough for a city of 110,000 households.
The country of eight million people is seeking to
make renewable energy account for 10 percent of its total consumption by 2020.
Solar power offers a clean alternative to fuel-
and carbon-fired electricity plants, which contribute to global warming with
their heat-trapping CO2 emissions.
"The government agreed to move ahead with
this technology -- even though we do not hide the fact that it is more
expensive than traditional electricity production -- precisely to achieve lower
costs over time," Gartner said at the site.
"The second solar tower will be slightly
less expensive, the third much less expensive, et cetera."
He predicted a futuristic landscape of towers
overlooking the desert.
Israel could in theory meet all its electricity
needs through solar energy by using only four percent of the Negev desert, said
Eitan Parnass, head of the Green Energy Association of Israel.
- Field of mirrors -
Israel's offshore gas finds are a major boost
toward energy independence, but Parnass said it must continue to diversify to
avoid reliance on a single source in the turbulent Middle East.
"We are in a situation where we cannot
simply look at the economic aspect," he said. "Israel has no choice but to diversify its
energy independence, first for reasons of security."
However, critics have panned the project as too
expensive and complex compared to other solutions.
Yael Cohen, an Israeli lawmaker with the
opposition Zionist Union alliance and co-chair of the Green Movement political
party, said the project has "requirements so demanding and costs so
high" that it cannot be replicated.
Solar power has for years formed a part of life in
Israel, where rooftop panels are often used to heat the water tanks of homes.
A solar tower and its field of mirrors, a
technology known as concentrated solar thermal, is only profitable as part of a
large-scale project, unlike a photovoltaic field, where each panel acts as a
small generator.
The Ashalim tower will be equipped with 55,000
projecting mirrors, amounting to a total reflective surface of a million square
metres (10.8 million square feet).
Like sunflowers, the mirrors will turn toward the
path of the sun.
Engineers have developed reservoirs for the task
of storing heat when the sun is not out.
"It's the big plus of solar tower
technology... centralization and stockage of energy at nighttime opens the path
to massive use of solar electricity in Israel," said Parnass.
Solar towers have already been built in locations
such as Morocco, South Africa and California, where the world's tallest at
present -- standing at 137 metres -- is located in Ivanpah in the Mojave
desert.
"We multiplied the size of the mirrors by
three compared to the previous generation," Gartner said.
"Everything is connected by WiFi instead of by cables. The tower and its boiler are also designed to reduce costs. Everything is done to pursue profitability."
Israel's
government launched a tender for the Ashalim solar tower project in 2013, as
part of a shift towards renewable energy and energy independence ©Jack Guez
(AFP)
|
Originally published by AFP
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