Energy – latest in science and technology | èƵ /subject/energy/ Science news and science articles from èƵ Wed, 01 Jul 2026 16:57:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0.1 242057827 Can home batteries help save the climate and save you money? /article/2531891-can-home-batteries-help-save-the-climate-and-save-you-money/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Thu, 25 Jun 2026 16:01:56 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2531891 2531891 Wildlife thrives in solar farm built on restored peatland /article/2529590-wildlife-thrives-in-solar-farm-built-on-restored-peatland/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 08 Jun 2026 17:00:11 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2529590 2529590 Solar farm on the ocean outperforms land-based solar in Taiwan /article/2527155-solar-farm-on-the-ocean-outperforms-land-based-solar-in-taiwan/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Tue, 19 May 2026 15:00:37 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2527155 Aerial view of solar panel. Taiwan
A floating photovoltaic project by Chenya Energy
shih-wei/Getty Images

The ocean could be the next frontier for the world’s rapidly expanding solar energy industry. That’s the finding of a study showing a floating solar farm off the coast of Taiwan produces more electricity and more profit than a nearby solar farm on land.

Taiwan is roughly the same size as the Netherlands, but it is mostly mountainous and has 5 million more people, meaning open space is scarce. As a potential solution, built a 181-megawatt offshore floating photovoltaic (OFPV) project – sometimes called a “floatovoltaic” – on 1.8 square kilometres of water in the protected bay of an industrial park in western Taiwan in 2020-21.

The year before, the Taiwan Power Company had constructed a 100-megawatt land-based photovoltaic (LPV) project on 1.4 square kilometres near the bay, providing an ideal comparison once researchers excluded the additional 81 megawatts of capacity at the floating solar installation.

Pound-for-pound, the floating solar produces 12 per cent more electricity than the land-based solar, they found. Even though it has slightly higher operations and maintenance costs, it generates 11 per cent net profit, as opposed to 8 per cent for the land-based solar.

“Installing the PV system on the sea, on water, is more difficult than installing the PV system on the ground,” says team member Ching-Feng Chen at the National Taipei University of Technology. But “for the carbon reduction, emissions reduction, OFPV is much better than LPV”.

More than 1100 floating solar systems have been on lakes and reservoirs, mostly in China and other densely populated Asian countries.

While the main attraction is that they don’t take land away from farming or development, they can also up to 20 per cent more electricity than land-based systems, although that number varies widely from site to site. The improved performance comes from the fact that solar panel efficiency declines as temperatures rise, and because conditions are typically 2-3°C cooler over water than over land. The stronger winds experienced over large bodies of water also contribute to this cooling effect.

“The principal enemy is the heat,” says Chen.

Floating solar on the ocean, where temperatures are even lower than on lakes and reservoirs, can more electricity still. But it’s also more challenging to build, and only a handful of projects have been deployed. The largest is in China, a 1-gigawatt system in shallow waters off the coast of Shandong province.

A framework of solar panels is attached to buoys and anchored to the ocean bottom. The floating solar in Taiwan rests directly on the seabed when the tide is out.

Installation costs in general are expected to be about 30 per cent higher on sea than on land because the systems have to resist humidity, rust, salt and waves, says Chen.

Salt and bird droppings also build up. Employees of the Taiwan project have to the panels from walkways and for driftwood and debris on jet skis. But the higher electricity output will more than compensate for these costs over a project’s lifetime.

Chen’s study did not consider the long-term wear and tear of waves and storms. That could become a bigger factor as offshore wind farms consider using floating solar to generate power when the wind isn’t blowing. Combined wind and solar covering 1 per cent of suitable ocean surface could provide almost 30 per cent of global electricity demand in 2050, a published last year found.

German and Dutch companies have been two solar projects about 12 kilometres off the coast of the Netherlands, one of which has waves of up to 10 metres since 2019. But last year, Shell and Eneco another floating solar system off the Netherlands’s coast – this one installed at the Hollandse Kust Noord offshore wind farm – after a defective electrical connector led to overheating.

Another concern is that floating PV shadows the water column and reduces wind mixing, which can oxygen and light available for aquatic life like phytoplankton and seaweed.

“If you do it further offshore, then maybe the waves and weather conditions and so on will become more problematic, but the closer to the shore the less favourable for biodiversity,” says at HZ University of Applied Sciences in the Netherlands.

Given that it impacts human activities less than land-based solar, however, “there’s definitely potential for this technology”, he says.

Because offshore PV is technically challenging, Chen thinks it will expand mainly in sunny islands that don’t have much offshore wind power, like Taiwan, Japan, Indonesia and Caribbean nations.

“Location is very important,” he says.

Journal reference

Journal of Renewable and Sustainable Energy

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Fire is spreading in the Chernobyl exclusion zone after drone crash /article/2525884-fire-is-spreading-in-the-chernobyl-exclusion-zone-after-drone-crash/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Fri, 08 May 2026 14:07:48 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2525884
A forest fire is burning in the exclusion zone around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine
Associated Press / Alamy Stock Photo
A large forest fire is spreading through the Chernobyl exclusion zone after a drone struck the area yesterday. Though the fire is serious, those on the ground say the risk of radioactive contamination outside the area is minimal. The Chornobyl Radiation and Ecological Biosphere Reserve (CREBR) wrote in a that around 12 square kilometres of land, located to the south-east of the Ukrainian town of Chernobyl and the nuclear plant’s former cooling ponds, are burning due to a drone crash – but didn’t give details on the type or origin of the device. As of Friday afternoon, some 331 people and 75 pieces of equipment are involved in the emergency response. “It’s really big. Guys who are working on [the] fire line are breathing air with high concentration of radionuclides,” says Denys Vyshnevskiy at the CREBR. “After the shift, they check concentration radionuclides in the body.” Vyshnevskiy says that 5 to 10 kilometres from the fire, the radiation levels are normal, and there is little risk of contamination outside the exclusion zone. Other estimates using satellite images seen by èƵ suggest that the area of the fire has actually grown to 24.4 square kilometres. at the Institute for Nuclear Research in Kyiv, Ukraine, was near the site when the fire started, but saw only smoke because the affected area was closed to scientists at the time by the military. She also thinks there is very little risk of radioactive contamination outside the zone.
The State Emergency Service of Ukraine (SES) said in a Telegram post that tackling the fire is . “The fire is rapidly spreading across the territory,” it wrote. Vyshnevskiy says the hope on the ground is that rain expected this evening will aid firefighters. The SES said that some areas are too dangerous for firefighters to access because of land mines, so are being left temporarily while efforts are concentrated elsewhere. The Chernobyl exclusion zone is frequently overflown by Russian drones en route to Kyiv and other targets within Ukraine. Last year, a Russian drone struck the New Safe Confinement shelter, which protects the highly radioactive remains of the 1986 disaster, blasting a hole all the way through its multi-layer construction. Footage from that night shows fire and smoke billowing from a gaping hole – luckily, it was far enough towards the edge of the building that debris didn’t fall onto the fragile reactor or sarcophagus below, which could have caused collapse and stirred up dangerously radioactive material.]]>
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How I pay almost nothing to power my house and electric car /article/2524387-how-i-pay-almost-nothing-to-power-my-house-and-electric-car/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Tue, 28 Apr 2026 09:00:25 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2524387 2524387 Electric vehicle owners could earn thousands by supporting power grid /article/2523429-electric-vehicle-owners-could-earn-thousands-by-supporting-power-grid/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Fri, 17 Apr 2026 17:00:54 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2523429 2523429 Will war in the Middle East accelerate the clean energy transition? /article/2519862-will-war-in-the-middle-east-accelerate-the-clean-energy-transition/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Wed, 18 Mar 2026 16:28:28 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2519862 2519862 Is geothermal energy on the cusp of a worldwide renaissance? /article/2517153-is-geothermal-energy-on-the-cusp-of-a-worldwide-renaissance/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Thu, 26 Feb 2026 10:00:02 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2517153 2517153 Old EV batteries could meet most of China’s energy storage needs /article/2515069-old-ev-batteries-could-meet-most-of-chinas-energy-storage-needs/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Tue, 10 Feb 2026 15:00:43 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2515069 2515069 How green hydrogen could power industries from steel-making to farming /article/2507293-how-green-hydrogen-could-power-industries-from-steel-making-to-farming/?utm_campaign=RSS|NSNS&utm_content=energy&utm_medium=RSS&utm_source=NSNS Mon, 15 Dec 2025 11:00:06 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=2507293 2507293