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A floating solar power farm built by Kyocera in Kyoto, Japan.
A floating solar power farm built by Kyocera in Kyoto, Japan.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images
A floating solar power farm built by Kyocera in Kyoto, Japan.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Japan begins work on 'world's largest' floating solar farm

This article is more than 8 years old

Electronics firm builds floating solar farm on a reservoir due to a scarcity of land for utility-scale solar in Japan

The Japanese electronics multinational Kyocera has begun work on what it says will be the world’s biggest floating solar farm.

The power plant is being built on a reservoir in Japan’s Chiba prefecture and is anticipated to supply enough electricity for nearly 5,000 households when it is completed in early 2018.

Space-starved Japan has already seen several floating solar farms built as part of the country’s drive to exploit more renewable energy in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima disaster. The shutdown of nuclear plants has seen Japan increasingly reliant on fossil fuel imports that have hit its emissions-cutting ambitions.

Artist’s impression of Kyocera’s Yamakura dam power plant, which aims to be the world’s largest floating solar power plant.
Artist’s impression of Kyocera’s Yamakura dam power plant, which aims to be the world’s largest floating solar power plant. Photograph: Courtesy of Kyocera Corp.

The Yamakura dam power plant will see more than 50,000 solar photovoltaic panels cover a 180,000 m sq area, but compared to other land-based plants it is relatively small. At 13.7MW when finished, it would not make the top 100 of the world’s largest solar photovoltaic farms.

In the UK, water company United Utilities started work last year on a floating solar farm on a Greater Manchester reservoir, which will be Europe’s largest once complete. Kyocera said it was turning to water because of a scarcity of land for utility-scale solar in Japan.

Ray Noble, a solar adviser at the UK-based Renewable Energy Association, said that the technology was relatively straightforward but the only reason to build floating farms would be if land was very tight.

“If you’re short on land like they are in Japan, you could build on water. But in the UK with plenty of industrialised areas, it’s cheaper to put solar on land than on water.”

The main challenge was to keep wiring away from the water and put the inverters - which convert the electricity generated into a usable form - on floating structures. But he added: “If anything goes wrong, I’ve always said electricity and water don’t mix.”

Kyocera has already built three floating solar farms, which are much smaller than the new one, which was first announced in October 2014.

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