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Drive on This: France Has Opened the World’s First Solar Road

In Brief

•   A village in Normandy, France has opened a kilometer-long road covered in solar panels, a project that took $5.2 million and five years to complete.

•   While the project is expensive and may not be a success, it is an example of how people are becoming more creative in generating clean and renewable energy.

Powering Street Lights

Tourouvre-au-Perche in Normandy, France is a young, little municipality established just January of this year. The 93.76 km2 (36.20 mile2) town of 3,400 residents will celebrate its anniversary under street lights powered by an inventive technology program.

This Wednesday, French Ecology Minister Ségolène Royal opened a kilometer-long solar panel road called Wattway in Tourouvre-au-Perche. The 2,800 square meters (3,348 square yards) of solar panels cost about $5.2 million and took five years to produce. In order to withstand traffic, the panels are coated with a clear silicon resin, and they were tested at four carparks across the country before installation.

France is working with Colas, the solar road’s manufacturer, on the possibility of installing these panels along another 1,000 kilometers (621 miles) of French road. Before that could happen, however, Colas would need to figure out how costs could be lowered for mass production.


Credits: Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images

 

It’s Expensive, but Does It Work?

People are becoming more creative in generating clean and renewable energy, and this idea is definitely outside the box. However, it’s also pretty expensive and might not work as expected, and critics have been quick to voice their disapproval of this solar panel road idea.

“It’s without doubt a technical advance, but in order to develop renewables there are other priorities than a gadget of which we are more certain that it’s very expensive than the fact it works,” says VP of Network for Energetic Transition (CLER) Marc Jedliczka, speaking to LeMonde. Furthermore, the road panels aren’t expected to be efficient because they are installed flat rather than following the usual angled layout of ordinary solar panels.

Royal says that the project is worth a shot, though, as “it takes advantage of large swathes of road infrastructure already in use…to produce electricity without taking up new real estate.”  France has about one million kilometers (621,371 miles) of roads in total, so scaling up could result in some big energy creation.

“We have to look at the cost, the production [of electricity] and its lifespan. For now, I don’t have the answers,” comments Jean-Louis Bal, president of renewable energy union SER.  Indeed, that’s the nature of science. It works by testing — trial and error — until definitive answers are reached. Of course, some might argue that those tests needn’t be as expensive as these solar panel roads, but when it comes to the potential of ushering in a future of efficient and clean energy, who’s to say what cost is too high?


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Last modified on Saturday, 24 December 2016 19:49

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