FRIDAY 05 FEBRUARY, 2010 |

Monash University Goes Solar

Monash University
has announced the completion of a solar farm at its Clayton
campus in Victoria as part of its commitment to reducing the institution's
carbon footprint.
The University says the solar panel array is likely the largest at any
Australian university. The 416 solar panels are capable of generating about
100,000 kWh of electricity annually - enough to power 25 average-sized
Australian homes.
Based on Victorian coal-fired generation, this is the equivalent of
offsetting 122 tonnes of greenhouse gas emission per year.
The 70kW rooftop solar farm is situated at the Campus Centre that houses many
of the food outlets, shops and student support services. The power the panels
produce is fed back into the campus' electricity grid.
A computer-controlled monitor at the Campus Centre generates real-time
statistics of the amount of clean electricity being produced and provides data
on carbon emission savings.
Ecologically Sustainable Design strategy manager Brett Walters said the
installation was hopefully the first of several significant renewable energy
investments at Monash.
"The provision of real-time information on energy savings is an
excellent way of tracking our achievements and will demonstrate the University's
commitment to reducing its environmental impact to the Monash community."
Increasingly, higher learning institutions around the world are implementing
rooftop solar electric systems to help meet their power needs, while reducing
their energy related carbon emission impact. Another recent example is
Harvard
University in the USA installing a 500-kilowatt
SunPower
based grid connected
solar
power system; another renewable energy addition to various
wind
power installations already in place around the campus.
News for Thursday 04 February, 2010
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