homehome Home chatchat Notifications


World's first solar road works better than expected

Only six months ago, a 230-foot strip of road was covered in solar panels in the Netherlands. Since then, some 3,000 kilowatt-hours of energy were produced or enough to power one Dutch home for a whole year. These news came as a surprise even to the developers of SolaRoad, as the project has been dubbed.

Tibi Puiu
May 11, 2015 @ 5:01 pm

share Share

Only six months ago, a 230-foot strip of road was covered in solar panels in the Netherlands. Since then, some  3,000 kilowatt-hours of energy were produced or enough to power one Dutch home for a whole year. These news came as a surprise even to the developers of  SolaRoad, as the project has been dubbed.

solaroad

People unsuspectingly cycling over the SolaRoad.

“We did not expect a yield as high as this so quickly,” said Sten de Wit, spokesman for the public-private partnership project, in a statement that deemed the first half-year of a three-year pilot a success.

“If we translate this to an annual yield, we expect more than the 70kwh per square meter per year,” de Wit said.

The solar panels were installed underneath a bicycle road that linked the two suburbs of  Krommenie and Wormerveer, in Amsterdam.  The SolaRoad is made of concrete paving slabs embedded with ordinary solar panels. The solar panels are protected by a centimetre-thick layer of transparent, skid-resistant tempered safety glass that can support bicycles and vehicles. As such, these aren’t exactly your typical rooftop solar panel, with all the pros and cons that come with them.

The test run aims to see whether SolaRoad is just as resistant as asphalt and doesn’t annoy pedestrians and cyclists with any reflections. The experiment will continue for another two and a half years to see how well the panels fair and how much electricity can be generated during this time frame, considering all the busy bike traffic (it’s Amsterdam, remember!). The ultimate goal is to fit these solar panels inside the roads for automobiles, which should be more challenging considering the traffic. In fact, this is a major concern. Will the glass handle the pressure exerted by tens of thousands of cars racing past it? Safety’s first, and SolaRoad officials are testing these sort of scenarios.

So far, more than 150,000 cyclists have zipped over the solar-generating part of the bike path. SolaRoad says they “hardly notice it is a special path.” With this in mind, it’s time to add another tidbit to the growing list of solar energy facts.

Personally, I find it all a bit overkill. The three-year project costs  3.5-million Euros, and while I understand the price tag covers research and developments costs as well, it’s still a stinger! Also, once spring came the temperature fluctuations caused the surface of the protective glass to peel off. This might be fixed so as to not happen in the future – not after every winter at least. But imagine having hundreds of kilometers of these panels under the road, only to close them for maintenance every year. That’s annoying, not to mention costly. Maybe we should first cover every available inch on our rooftops first.

share Share

Over 70% of the world's aquifers could be tainted by 2100

Over 2.5 billion people depend on aquifers for fresh water, but rising seas and climate change are pushing saltwater into these crucial reserves.

Superhot Rock Energy Could Provide Enough Power to Fuel the U.S. Thousands of Times Over

Could next-generation geothermal energy finally fulfill its promise of ridding us of fossil fuels for good?

AI Uncovers Thousands of Abandoned Oil Wells Hidden in Old Maps

Combing through old maps, this AI finds abandoned oil wells so we can cut off their methane emissions.

Google's DeepMind claims they have the best weather prediction model

After chess, Go, and proteins, has DeepMind taken over weather forecasting as well?

First Ice-Free Day in the Arctic Could Happen by 2027, Study Warns

Climate change is heating up faster than we thought.

Even ExxonMobil is telling Trump to tone it down on fossil fuels

Even ExxonMobil, a symbol of fossil fuel dominance, is urging climate action, underscoring the tension between Trump’s policies and industry realities.

Researchers present the first fully AI-designed wind turbine — it's 7x more efficient in cities

AI is transforming urban wind energy. Researchers in Birmingham, UK, have developed a revolutionary turbine optimized for low wind speeds and urban turbulence.

NASA accidentally rediscovers forgotten doomsday Cold War base in Greenland

The ambitious and top secret project was supposed to withstand a first strike by the Soviet Union, but it ultimately couldn't withstand nature's cold embrace.

Big oil and chemical companies teamed up to "end plastic waste". They produced 1,000 times more than they cleaned up

"The Alliance to End Plastic Waste promised a $1.5 billion solution to plastic pollution. Five years later, it’s cleaned up less plastic than its members produce in two days.

Fiji is already relocating villages because of climate change

Dozens of villages have to move or be destroyed.