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Sky's The Limit As Swiss Test Solar Panels At Jungfrau Summit

Mount Jungfrau, Swiss Alps.
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Nov 23, 2006
The peak of the Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps could be the home to the world's highest solar-energy power station if tests prove succesful, Swiss electricity company FMB said on Thursday. Test panels have been installed at 3,700 metres (12,139 feet) above sea level, making them the highest in the world, according to FMB spokesman Antonio Sommavilla.

Up till now, the record was held by another of the company's installations in the Swiss Jura region, at 1,200 metres above sea level, he told AFP.

Engineers began installing a dozen solar panels last week to test their reaction of the high altitude and in particular to ice.

They should benefit from the high amount of sunlight at the peak, and the cold which boosts the panels' productivity, Sommavilla said.

If the tests prove successful, a small power station will be set up at 3,500 metres, on the roof of one of the buildings of the famed 'Jungfraubahn' rack-and-pinion railway, which takes thousands of tourists to the mountain's summit every year.

The electricity produced will power the railway, but only when the sun beams upon the panels. A further station will be installed to power a Swisscom telecoms mast slightly higher up the mountain, at 3,700 metres, FMB said in a statement. FMB is majority owned by the canton of Bern, with Germany's E.On Energie holding a 20 percent stake.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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China To Build One Of Earth's Biggest Solar Power Stations
Shanghai (AFP) Nov 21, 2006
China intends to build one of the world's biggest solar power stations at a cost of 765 million dollars, state press reported Tuesday. The 100-megawatt facility, to be built in Dunhuang, an oasis town in northwest China's Gansu province, will be a collaborative effort between the local government and Beijing's Zhonghao New Energy Investment, Xinhua news said. The project will take five-years to construct, it added.







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