Chernobyl solar park new life begins at chernobyl 0 1717

solar park

Chernobyl Solar Park started now. Ukraine launched yesterday a park of photo-voltaic panels at the former Chernobyl power plant as the country seeks to use solar power to give the scene of the world’s worst nuclear disaster a new lease on life. The $1.2-million, one-megawatt plant is located just a hundred meters (yards) from a giant metal dome sealing the remains of the the nuclear power plant which suffered a catastrophic meltdown in 1986. “Today we are connecting the station to the power system of Ukraine,” Yevgen Varyagin, the head of Solar Chernobyl, a Ukrainian-German company behind the project, said at the launch ceremony.

The facility, which is installed across an area of 1.6 hectares (4 acres), can power a medium-sized village, or about 2,000 households. Plans are to eventually produce 100 megawatts at the site, which due to contamination from radiation cannot be used for farming. Reactor Number Four of the Chernobyl plant exploded April 26, 1986 and the fallout contaminated up to three quarters of Europe, according to some estimates, especially hitting Russia, Ukraine and Belarus.

Following the disaster, Soviet authorities evacuated hundreds of thousands of people and the vast territory — over 2,000 square kilometres wide — has remained abandoned. The other reactors were only gradually shut down, with the last closing in 2000, ending industrial activity in the area. Humans cannot return to live in the zone for another 24,000 years, according to the Ukrainian authorities.

Chernobyl Solar Plant

The station was built by a joint German-Ukrainian project just a few hundred meters from the reactor, which layed the sarcophagus. Its construction has cost € 1 million, writes Reuters.

“This is not just another solar power plant is the only one (station — ed.), which is located 100 metres from the nuclear reactor that exploded in 1986. It is difficult to overestimate the symbolism of this project” – Eugene Baragin CEO-partner of the project Solar LLC Chernobyl

The company also announced an increase in capacity of power plants in Chernobyl from 1 to 100 megawatts.

Solar Chernobyl. Presentation.

Posted by Solar Chernobyl on Saturday, October 6, 2018

Also Read: Indian Railways all set to trial run first Solar-powered train in Jodhpur

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