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  • Apres petrole et gaz, le soleil du Sahara

    After oil and gas, Sahara sunshine?



    A gas station of Sidi Fredj, west of Algiers, is equipped with solar panels, July 10, 2007. Now Algeria, rich from sales of oil and gas and aware that its fossil fuels will one day run dry, is one country in the region mapping out a program to produce solar power on an industrial scale _ and even export it to Europe.
    (AP Photo)

    By Aidan Lewis, Associated Press Writer | August 11, 2007


    ALGIERS, Algeria -- It's a vision that has long enticed energy planners: solar panels stretching out over vast swaths of the Sahara desert, soaking up sun to generate clean, green power.


    Now Algeria, aware that its oil and gas riches will one day run dry, is gearing up to tap its sunshine on an industrial scale for itself and even Europe.
    Work on its first plant began late last month at Hassi R'mel, 260 miles south of Algiers, the capital. The plant will be a hybrid, using both sun and natural gas to generate 150 megawatts. Of that, 25 megawatts will come from giant parabolic mirrors stretching over nearly 2 million square feet -- roughly 45 football fields.
    Experts say it's the first project of its kind to combine gas and steam turbines with solar thermal input in a hybrid plant.
    The plant should be ready in 2010, and the longer-term goal is to export 6,000 megawatts of solar-generated power to Europe by 2020, about a tenth of current electricity consumption in Germany.
    "Our potential in thermal solar power is four times the world's energy consumption so you can have all the ambitions you want with that," said Tewfik Hasni, managing director of New Energy Algeria, or NEAL, a company created by the Algerian government in 2002 to develop renewable energy.
    The project is still at an early stage and faces daunting financial and technological obstacles. Solar power's supporters say it will take 10 years for it to become economically competitive, and while undersea cables to Sicily and Spain are planned for construction in 2010-2012, it isn't known who will finance them.
    But as the world grows increasingly anxious about climate change and dwindling fossil fuels, ideas that once sounded like science fiction are becoming ever more plausible.
    The European Union this year set a mandatory target of producing 20 percent of its energy consumption from renewable sources by 2020, and there are also big political imperatives in play.
    In Algeria's case, exporting solar power through undersea cables would add flesh and bone to the idea floated by Nicolas Sarkozy, France's new president, of a "Mediterranean Union" that would bind Europe and North Africa closer together.
    The Algerian program is part of a broader reassessment of green technologies by countries that owe their wealth to oil and gas. Algeria, population 33 million, remains heavily dependent on oil and gas exports, which earned it about $54 billion last year.
    "Until now, all the oil-producing countries under the lead of Saudi Arabia did everything to torpedo renewable energies," said Wolfgang Palz, chairman of the independent World Council for Renewable Energy, speaking on the sidelines of an international conference on renewable energy in Algiers in June.

    This is really a big change now because with all this talking about the limitations of conventional resources," oil-producing countries "feel obliged to do something," he said.
    Algeria seems an obvious source of solar power.


    Africa's second largest country is more than four-fifths desert, with enough sunshine to meet Western Europe's needs 60 times over, according to estimates cited by Algeria's energy ministry.
    "The solar potential of Algeria is huge, enormous, because solar radiation is high and there is plenty of land for solar plants," said Eduardo Zarza Moya, who works on solar power for Spain's public energy research center, CIEMAT. "The price of the land is low, it's cheap, and there is also manpower."
    Algeria already uses photovoltaic solar panels to electrify 18 scattered, off-grid villages in the Sahara, and 16 more are due to come on line by 2009. Two such projects are run by British-based company BP.
    The Hassi R'Mel site represents large-scale power generation. It is the first of four planned hybrid plants which will use Algeria's abundant natural gas to supplement sunshine and ensure power at night or in cloudy weather. The Hassi R'Mel plant, which will produce power for domestic consumption, will also house a research center to study how to reduce solar power costs.
    The hybrid plants will use a thermal technology called concentrating solar power, or CSP, in which sunlight heats fluids to drive an electricity-generating turbine.
    The system is widely regarded as being cheaper and having better storage potential for large-scale energy production than photovoltaic technology, which converts sunlight directly into electricity. CSP plants have operated in California since the 1980s, but when gas prices fell, new construction stopped.
    Spanish engineering firm Abener has a 66 percent share in the $425 million Hassi R'Mel project, having won an international tender to build the plant with Algeria's NEAL.
    Algeria hopes to build three other hybrids generating 400 megawatts each by 2015, by which time Algeria aims to be producing 6 percent of its electricity from renewable sources.
    Experts warn that financing the cables may wipe out the profits from selling the power in Europe. They also say the domestic market will find it hard to compete with cheap Algerian oil and gas.
    But they're positive about the long-term outlook. The gas component in the hybrid plants will produce some greenhouse emissions. "But gas is much cleaner than oil and in time you will increase the share of solar," said Richard Perez, a research professor specializing in solar power at the State University of New York. He spoke to The Associated Press by phone.
    Franz Trieb, an analyst at the German Space Agency in Stuttgart who helped produce a recent study on CSP in Mediterranean and Middle East countries, said that by 2020 the cost of collecting solar power would be equivalent to paying $15 for a barrel of oil.
    "In 2020, we will have considerable capacity of CSP installed worldwide and this will lead to cost reductions," he said. Delivery systems "would add a little bit to the cost but not too much. It could be competitive with electricity prices in Europe."
    According to International Energy Agency figures, renewable energies excluding hydroelectricity still account for just 2 percent of world power, and 0.5 percent of world energy production. Fossil fuels are expected to remain dominant until at least 2030.
    But investment in renewable energy rose from $80 billion in 2005 to $100 billion in 2006, and solar companies raised more than any other renewable energy sector on public markets last year, at $5.6 billion -- more than triple what they raised in 2005, according to a report released in June by the United Nations Environment Program. The biggest investments were in the United States, Europe, China and India.
    Major energy companies say they are not yet ready to invest abroad on a large scale. ExxonMobil spokesman Dave Gardner said the technology breakthroughs would have to be significant to attract ExxonMobil investment.
    But he said his company is seeking to foster such breakthroughs by funding a $225 million project at Stanford University on renewables and energy efficiency.
    Algerian energy officials acknowledge that the country's success with solar power will depend on demand and technology.
    Right now, solar-derived electricity costs 25 percent more than using gas and will need to be subsidized for 10 years until the cost of solar power comes down, said Hasni, the Algerian company director.

    "The current race is to see who will control renewable energy technologies, and we are in the race," Algerian Energy Minister Chakib Khelil told reporters. "We have the human and financial resources, and we have the will."





    Dernière modification par absent, 25 mai 2008, 21h09.

  • #2

    À titre d’illustration: Surface de centrales thermiques solaires qui permettrait de satisfaire la demande électrique actuelle de l’Allemagne, de l’Europe (UE-25) et du monde entier. (Données fournies par le Centre Aéronautique et Spatial Allemand (DLR), 2005)

    The technical progress allows humanity to consume more than it would naturally be capable. This development is connected to the fast growing population and responsible for our future key issues: climate change, shorting of resources - which are resulting into conflicts over territory, food and water - increases the gap between rich and poor. Our hope is, that this technical progress will arrive at a stage, where it starts to be efficient enough to balance things out. So far this was not the case, but a new project captured our attention and therefore support.

    The idea is to create a huge farm of mirrors in North Africa. These mirrors bundle the sun light and so generate a very high temperature. This heat will boil water and create steam. The steam powers a turbine which creates electricity. Sounds very simple. It is - and also is highly efficient.

    The project was presented in Brussels by the global think tank Club of Rome last November. The concept is based on studies by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) about solar thermal power generation as a safe, clean and cheap power supply for Europe and the MENA region (Middle East and North Africa). The key technologies for the concept are solar thermal power plants with thermal storage for day/night operation and low-loss high-voltage direct current transmission to transport the clean energy from the MENA region to Europe.
    Due to the higher solar radiation in North Africa, a solar thermal power plant located there can generate three times the energy that would be possible in Germany, for the same investment. Using the right cables, transport losses between North Africa and central Europe can be kept very low (approximately 10 %). If the concept is implemented, it could be possible to cover 10-25 % of the European energy demand using solar thermal power plants in the MENA region by 2050.
    The project could gain support (like Prince Hassan bin Talal), but its realisation has still not started. The reasons, says Gerhard Knies, the thinker behind the initiative, are the fears Europe's to involve countries like Algeria or Morocco into such an important area like energy production. But honestly, rather North Africa than countries like Iran, Russia, ...

    Please support this project: www.desertec.org

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    • #3
      Merci far solitair , on dirais que dieu a béni cette Algerie !!!
      ... « La douleur m’a brisée, la fraternité m’a relevée, de ma blessure a jailli un fleuve de liberté » Mémorial de Caen .

      Commentaire


      • #4
        ya khouya barak allaho fik l'article est hautement interessant.

        Commentaire


        • #5
          Merci far solitair , on dirais que dieu a béni cette Algerie !!!
          Dieu a béni toute l'humanité, faut juste bien utiliser ces ressources !

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          • #6
            Avec la hausse continue des prix du pétrole, l'électricité solaire deviendra de plus en plus économiquement viable à l'échelle industrielle. Avec un Sahara vaste de 2 millions de km2 et sa proximité au marché européen, l'Algérie a un avantage sérieux pour rester un exportateur d'énergie après la fin du pétrole.

            Commentaire


            • #7
              Vu la proportion géographique, comment on va nettoyer et entretenir ces panneaux solaire rangés par le sable et le vent ?
              ?

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              • #8
                Vu la proportion géographique, comment on va nettoyer et entretenir ces panneaux solaire rangés par le sable et le vent ?

                LA solution existe déjà et elle est meme utilisée pour nottoyer les milliers de m² de vitre des gratte-ciels ce sont les "ROBOTS"
                .


                Nul n’est plus désespérément esclave, que ceux faussement convaincus d’être libres"-JWVG

                Commentaire


                • #9
                  Un article trés interessant!


                  Algeria Eyes Solar Energy Exports To Europe

                  5/13/2008 2:34:00 PM | Zawya.com

                  By Natalie Obiko Pearson

                  Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

                  ALGIERS, Algeria (Dow Jones)--An Algerian state-controlled power company is erecting a forest of billboard-sized mirrors in the middle of the desert in the country's first large-scale attempt to harvest solar energy from the Sahara and potentially transmit it to consumers thousands of miles away in Europe.

                  Algeria wants to lay high voltage power lines to connect its electricity grid directly to Spain and Italy: a critical step to sending electricity across vast distances to new markets. Doing so would position the North African country - already a key natural gas supplier in Europe - to snap up an even larger share of the European energy market, which is moving to boost the role of renewable sources in its energy mix. 'There's no question we want to do it: we have the space for it, we have the (solar) radiation,' Algeria's Oil Minister Chakib Khelil said in a recent interview in the Algerian capital.

                  So far the Algerian government is having trouble winning commitments to sell its solar-powered electricity to European utilities at a premium to cover costs because governments are reluctant to pay more to Algieria suppliers when they are paying subsidies to promote their own renewable energy industries.

                  But the European Commission aims for a 20% increase in energy from renewable sources by 2020 as part of a climate and energy package seeking approval from the European Parliament and member states. And experts like Luis Crespo, secretary-general of Protermo Solar, a solar energy industry group in Spain, say that the European Union will have to import renewable power to reach those goals.

                  Crespo says the continent will have to look elsewhere if it's to meet those proposed targets because installing sprawling solar and wind farms in Europe on the scale necessary would be hampered by a lack of appropriate space. 'We're talking about all of Europe getting 20% of its primary energy from renewable sources in 2020 - for that, it's certain that Europe will have to count on the importation of clean energy from Africa,' Crespo says. The technology to generate that proportion of renewable solar energy is already at work in Algeria and elsewhere.

                  Morocco, Egypt and Algeria are all building hybrid solar-gas plants based on technologies introduced 20 years ago in the U.S. demonstrating that solar energy could be concentrated on an industrial scale via large fields of mirrors to power utilities. Progress in the field, however, came to a virtual halt as an era of cheap oil eroded the incentive to develop alternative energy sources.

                  The hybrid plants will still depend largely on natural gas: the solar portion serves to increase efficiency by boosting output with fewer emissions during daylight hours. Solar will account for the largest share of overall output in the Algerian plant providing up to 34 megawatts or nearly a quarter of the 150-megawatt plant's production during peak sunlight hours. 'It's a beginning. The entrance of solar into such a (technologically) conservative environment - it's a first step,' says Franz Trieb from Germany's Institute of Technical Thermodynamics, who has done feasibility studies of producing solar power for export to Europe from North Africa and the Middle East, as well as for large desalination projects in the region.

                  Algeria's $315 million project - 66% owned by Spain's Abengoa and 34% by an Algerian government-controlled consortium, NEAL - will see giant rows of mirrors stretching across an area the size of 33 football fields. The parabolic mirrors concentrate the sun's rays on fluid-filled tubes - much the way a magnifying glass can be used to burn paper - which then produces steam to power conventional turbines.

                  Solar will only account for 5% of total yearly output at the 150 megawatt plant, which comes on line in 2010, though that is enough to qualify it as a 'renewable' source by current industry standards, the developers say. They also say the project's purpose is to lay the groundwork for a far more advanced solar power industry in the future. 'We're looking at this as a pilot project to start getting involved in solar but eventually we aim to become among the leaders. We don't want to miss the train,' says Badis Derradji, executive director of NEAL, who points out that Algeria has been an energy pioneer before when it launched the world's first liquid natural gas shipments.

                  Algeria aims to source 10% of its energy needs from renewables by 2030. Derradji says that will mean more advanced projects ahead that will be 100% solar-run and capable of storing energy in order to supply power around-the-clock even during the night, just like projects underway in Spain and the United States at the forefront of large-scale solar power generation. 'The answer is completely unqualified - it's possible to export solar electricity to Europe. The technology is already in use,' says Crespo. Algeria and its fellow members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries have often complained about the threat posed by alternative energies to oil producers and their future revenues.

                  The developments come, however, as OPEC members - many of whom have vast, largely unpopulated desert spaces that are home to some of the sunniest spots on Earth - appear to be taking notice of solar's potential.

                  Finding alternative energies to meet soaring domestic energy consumption at home could prove crucial to OPEC members' ability to maintain oil and gas for exports in the future: OPEC figures show that domestic fuel consumption within the group has been doubling at more than twice the rate of exports since 2000.

                  Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter, is plowing millions of dollars into research to determine how solar energy should be harnessed as it seeks to meet growing power demand and to limit carbon emissions.

                  Algeria estimates that its solar potential could reach a whopping 169,000 terawatt hours a year, or 48 times Europe's total forecasted electricity demand in 2020 of 3,500 terawatt hours a year.

                  Shokri Ghanem, the head of Libya's oil policy, goes so far as to say: 'We have an abundant supply of sun I think one day we will be exporting solar energy instead of oil. We would love to, but right now, it's the economics.' Countries like Germany and Spain have implemented feed-in tariffs - a system of long-term financial incentives requiring utilities to buy electricity from renewable sources at a premium in order to promote the adoption of renewable energies.

                  Algeria sees an opportunity there, but Khelil says that so far European countries have said they are unwilling to pay the premium for solar energy from Algeria that they would pay to providers in their own countries. 'That's the problem. I said, 'Would you give me the 30% (premium) you give to renewable energy? They said no, it's only applicable to Europeans,' Khelil said. That has slowed down plans to directly link up Algeria with Europe's electricity grid: 2000 megawatt power cables were supposed to be laid simultaneously along with two new natural gas pipelines connecting Algeria to Spain and Sardinia. Construction began last month on the Algeria-Spain pipeline, but so far no power cables are being placed.

                  Khelil says Algeria is ready to revisit its plans, including joint ventures with European companies for solar energy exports, as soon as European governments offer the right conditions.

                  Industry experts say the cables will get installed regardless of whether they carry renewable or non-renewable energy because they simply make sense.

                  High-voltage cables interconnect and stabilize electricity grids and also allow electricity to be sent more efficiently across long distances by minimizing the amount lost in transmission, which occurs along older lines. Such cables already exist in Europe, Africa and elsewhere.

                  Trieb says oil-producing country or not, pursuing solar energy is a no-brainer for countries in North Africa and the Middle East because solar energy costs are estimated to fall to the equivalent of $25 a barrel or less by 2020. 'Oil will never come back to that level,' he says. The biggest hurdle solar faces is that 'people think it's too good to be true.'

                  -By Natalie Obiko Pearson, Dow Jones

                  (END) Dow Jones Newswires
                  “Tout le monde fait des bêtises. Le fin du fin, c'est de les faire au moment où personne ne regarde.”

                  Commentaire


                  • #10
                    super article far
                    j aimerais connaitre la proposition allemande (visite d engela)pour lancer ce projet d avenir pour l algerie
                    de toute manieres il faut que sonelgaz achete a tour de bras des entreprises et des scientifiques meme israeliens agissant dans le secteur
                    c vital
                    The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.” Winston Churchill

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                    • #11
                      de toute manieres il faut que sonelgaz achete a tour de bras des entreprises et des scientifiques meme israeliens agissant dans le secteur
                      c vital

                      __________________

                      Il faut commencer à investir sur l'homme et non pas compter eternellement sur la nature surtout que le solaire c'est plus de la moitié des pays de la planete qui en dispose contrairement aux hydrocarbures.

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                      • #12
                        Chicha,

                        A cote de l Europe? Ayant une telle radiation solaire? Avec autant d espaces disponibles?
                        Peut etre la libye oui.

                        Commentaire


                        • #13
                          algerie

                          *****

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