clau00006Aug 221 min readThe Australian government has approved a 4,300km undersea cable project to send solar power to Singapore.In Australia, your lights might run on solar electricity within the next ten years.The Australian government has approved the Australia-Asia Power Link (AAPowerLink) project, which will use solar energy gathered in an Australian desert to power Darwin and Singapore.Under the leadership of tech millionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes, SunCable is constructing massive solar farms in interior Australia with the goal of laying a 4,300km underwater cable that will carry up to 6 GW of electricity to Darwin and Singapore continuously.Maybe in the early 2030s.Though regulatory obstacles still exist, SunCable predicted that energy supply will probably start in the early 2030s if all goes according to plan.In 2027, a final investment decision will be made.Second, SunCable must obtain regulatory approval from the Indonesian government because the project will cross the country's maritime boundary.Furthermore, SunCable is still in negotiations with Singapore's Energy Market Authority (EMA) on the conditional approval application for the undersea cable interconnector component of the project, even though the Australian government has approved the project's Australian component.Solar powerThe "most promising renewable energy source" in Singapore, according to EMA, is solar energy.By 2030, EMA hopes to have built solar capacity of at least 2 gigawatt-peak (GWp), which would be enough to supply about 350,000 families' yearly electricity demands.An increasing number of solar panels are being installed over bodies of water, such as reservoirs and the Straits of Johor, in addition to building rooftops, as demonstrated by the 2014 start of the SolarNova initiative.
In Australia, your lights might run on solar electricity within the next ten years.The Australian government has approved the Australia-Asia Power Link (AAPowerLink) project, which will use solar energy gathered in an Australian desert to power Darwin and Singapore.Under the leadership of tech millionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes, SunCable is constructing massive solar farms in interior Australia with the goal of laying a 4,300km underwater cable that will carry up to 6 GW of electricity to Darwin and Singapore continuously.Maybe in the early 2030s.Though regulatory obstacles still exist, SunCable predicted that energy supply will probably start in the early 2030s if all goes according to plan.In 2027, a final investment decision will be made.Second, SunCable must obtain regulatory approval from the Indonesian government because the project will cross the country's maritime boundary.Furthermore, SunCable is still in negotiations with Singapore's Energy Market Authority (EMA) on the conditional approval application for the undersea cable interconnector component of the project, even though the Australian government has approved the project's Australian component.Solar powerThe "most promising renewable energy source" in Singapore, according to EMA, is solar energy.By 2030, EMA hopes to have built solar capacity of at least 2 gigawatt-peak (GWp), which would be enough to supply about 350,000 families' yearly electricity demands.An increasing number of solar panels are being installed over bodies of water, such as reservoirs and the Straits of Johor, in addition to building rooftops, as demonstrated by the 2014 start of the SolarNova initiative.
Photographers reveal the first-ever images of a living individual of a rare snake that hasn't been seen in Singapore in 64 years.
Following a 0-0 tie with Singapore, football fans in Malaysia were observed fighting and hurling objects at the train station.
Opmerkingen