Australia to build the world's bigger solar farm - then send the power to Singapore!

 Yes, you read that right, Australia is set to build the world’s biggest solar facility, then transport the solar power over to Singapore.

How is that possible, you may ask. Well, part of the whopping AUD$20bn being pumped into the project, which is spread across a space the size of 20,000 football fields, will go on constructing the planet’s longest submarine power cable, with the equipment able to export the electricity from the Australian outback all the way to Singapore via a 4,500km high-voltage direct current (HVDC) network.

David Griffin, CEO of Sun Cable, spoke on the impact of this ambitious project, saying; “It is extraordinary technology that is going to change the flow of energy between countries. It is going to have profound implications and the extent of those implications hasn't been widely identified. If you have the transmission of electricity over very large distances between countries, then the flow of energy changes from liquid fuels – oil and LNG – to electrons. Ultimately, that's a vastly more efficient way to transport energy. The incumbents just won't be able to compete."

With construction set to begin in 2023, and projected solar generation to begin in late 2026 and begin to be exported in early 2027, it is definitely an exciting project to keep an eye on in the years to come.


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