- The first "green train" in Europe to harness solar energy is running between Paris and Amsterdam.
 - Sixteen thousand solar panels produce 3,300 megawatts per hour of electricity.
 - The electricity generated on-site reduces energy losses and transportation costs.
 
High-speed international trains linking Paris and Amsterdam as of  Monday became the first in Europe to use electricity generated by solar  panels installed in a tunnel on the line.
At a cost of 15.6 million euros, project managers say the  3.6-kilometer tunnel crossing Antwerp, in northern Belgium, is fitted  with 16,000 solar panels covering 50,000 square meters, roughly eight  football fields.
The panels produce 3,300 megawatts per hour of electricity, or the average annual consumption of nearly 1,000 families.
The first "green train" left Antwerp on Monday for the Dutch border.  While it was filled as usual with commuters and students, for a dozen or  so kilometers, its engines plugged into the solar energy source fitted  along the line.
The electricity produced feeds into the line's infrastructure, for  lighting, signals and in-train power points, said Frederic Sacre,  spokesman for Infrabel, which runs the rail network.
"By using electricity generated on-site, we eliminate energy losses  and transport costs," said Steven De Tollenaere, head of project  developers Enfinity, which leans on state subsidies backing energy use  that meets clean climate goals.
The company hopes the project will allow it to develop new  installations in the United States and other parts of the world, citing  train hangars as ideal sites for such charging points in the future.
by "environment clean generations" 

Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar