A Japanese joint venture is set to build what could be the world's largest floating solar project – a 2.9MW PV plant in Hyogo Prefecture, west Japan.Japanese solar company Kyocera announced the project on its website this week, which it began developing in 2o12, in conjunction with local real estate and industry group, Century Tokyo Leasing, shortly after the introduction of Japan's solar feed-in tariff (FiT). The two companies have already developed 92.8MW of PV across 28 locations in Japan, of which 21.6MW is now online at 11 plants, according to Kyocera, and plan to develop around 60MW of floating PV on roughly 30 sites by May 2015.floating_pv_kyocera_200_150_s_c1
This latest floating solar project will consist of two arrays – one 1.7MW, making it the world's largest floating solar plan, and one 1.2MW – which are designed to float on the surface of reservoirs. The use of floating solar technology addresses both the energy deficits created by Japan's shift away from nuclear, as well as its chronic shortage of land on which to build large-scale solar projects.
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Sep 11, 2014
Japan JV to build world’s largest floating solar array
RNE has an article on a Japanese plan to building a solar power plant offshore - Japan JV to build world's largest floating solar array.