Sunniest place on Earth could bring power to poor in West Africa
source: http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnLO589124.html
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"We have the natural resource -- enough sunshine that can supply our total power requirements," Kwame Ampofo, an energy expert and a member of Ghana's parliament, told Reuters late on Tuesday after legislators from the region discussed the project.
The meeting, held in electricity-hungry Ghana beside one of the biggest hydropower lakes in the world, urged regional leaders to form a West African Renewable Energy Community to promote sustainable power projects.
West Africa's richest country, Nigeria, is the continent's top oil producer but many of its people lack reliable power. Sub-Saharan Africans have the lowest average power consumption in the world, and just one in four have access to electricity.
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SUN IN THE SAHARA
One of the main projects proposed at the Ghana meeting would use mirrors to concentrate sunlight and boil water to drive electrogenic turbines.
The U.S. space agency NASA says the sunniest spot on land is in northern Niger -- the sunniest part of the planet being in the Pacific Ocean, less practical for solar projects.
"This form of power generation could serve the populous coastal regions well, if connected to the northern parts of West Africa, where there are desert areas with good solar radiation for much of the year," Gerhard Knies, a German physicist who presented the project to the Ghana meeting, said in a statement.
"This technology has been shown to work and is in operation in Spain and the United States. Above all, it does not pollute, is inexhaustible and will not be subject to rising fuel costs," said Knies, whose country is planning solar projects in Algeria.
A closing declaration from the meeting at the Akosombo Dam on the 250-mile (400 km) long Lake Volta called for a feasibility study to address technical, economic, financial and political aspects of the clean energy project.
Legislators also agreed to push countries across the 15-member Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to pass a special funding tariff law to ensure investors in renewable energy projects could recoup the high investment costs -- a major obstacle to clean energy projects.
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- goldenways
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Framos0804
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The Earth has provided its inhabitants with everything they need to sustain their living. It is up to us humans to acknowledge this and use it. Wind, Solar, Water, etc. We spent centuries trying to develop technology that destroyed out environment in order to produce energy. If only we saw what has always been in front of us. Its about time we revert back.
- 3 years ago
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Framos0804
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TaylerPERRY
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Bloody hell...
That's insane. - 3 years ago
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TaylerPERRY
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futurehempfarmer
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Sweet!
- 3 years ago
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futurehempfarmer
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synclaire
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bet it would make a great terrorist target.
- 3 years ago
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synclaire
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dreferr
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Does not pollute and is inexhaustible. Well actually it is exhaustible but we should be good for the next few billion years. Thank you Sun.
- 3 years ago
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dreferr
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keeshii768
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very very interesting. and pretty damn cool for lack of a better world. i hope everything follows through.
- 3 years ago
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keeshii768
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Swiyyah
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cool!
- 3 years ago
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Swiyyah
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jahbini
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I have often wondered about the capability to turn deserts into areas of productivity. This is one of a number of great ideas: The environment is very harsh there, I hope the engineers can make it go.
Ya - Hooo!!!
- 3 years ago
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jahbini
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jubal
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Big changes are coming, I can feel it in my bones.
- 3 years ago
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jubal
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metalcookiesxy70
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I hope everything goes into its process, its better to turn the nation into an oil-free country(and continent), than turn it into the consuming nation, even though america has rid them, and has pleged them with oil.
- 3 years ago
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metalcookiesxy70
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stopnoise
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There are differences between "could" and "will." I hope it will be a "will"
- 3 years ago
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stopnoise
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Virtual_Will_Rogers
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...Does anyone know yet the damage that the Sun will do to this large collections of solar panels?...what is there expected lifespan...or is it way too early to know...I have not seen any yet that ventilate themselves to stop latent heat build up....and this is not negative...I have been building them for forty years mostly water heating....and have seen the Sun do some wild things....Will
- 3 years ago
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Virtual_Will_Rogers
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onechance
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Virtual_Will_Rogers:
"Warranties will reflect this: crystalline panels are often guaranteed from 20 years to lifetime. Thin film panels receive shorter warranties (usually from 2-5 years), but have been known to still be putting out a charge for up to double that time." from this article.
- 3 years ago
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onechance
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Virtual_Will_Rogers
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...keep on the sunny side......
...always on the sunny side....
...keep on the sunny side of life....
vote no on the Sun tax....sorry...thats three years away...
...Golden Ruler...Will - 3 years ago
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Virtual_Will_Rogers
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onechance
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Africa (probably one of the poorest countries in the world) will have renewable, clean energy before the richest countries in the world... Go figure.
Thanks you greedy oil barren pricks.
- 3 years ago
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onechance
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argyle_kitten
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onechance:
Africa is not a country.
- 3 years ago
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argyle_kitten
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keeshii768
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onechance:
Not a country.
- 3 years ago
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keeshii768
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JanforGore
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Imagine that... actually using sustainable energy in Africa to help the poor in Africa.
- 3 years ago
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JanforGore
