Taiwan installing solar pannels
Martijn Visser
Owner at 顏實力有限公司 Vimp Co., Ltd .vimp.tw Technical consultant office plus manpower Asia
The government is pushing to make solar power systems more common in Taiwan, a move that Premier Lin Chuan said will diversify the nation’s energy portfolio, make the island more energy self-sufficient, and stimulate domestic demand and employment.
After hearing the Ministry of Economic Affairs’ report on its two-year photo voltaic promotion project, he instructed the agency to set up a single window for facilitating solar energy installations.
According to the ministry, the government plans to have renewable energy account for 20 percent of electricity generated by 2025, a target that will support safe energy, a green economy and environmental sustainability. In particular, the power capacity of solar installations will be increased to 20 gigawatts (GW), with 3 GW coming from rooftop-mounted panels and 17 GW from ground-mounted panels.
For the two-year photo voltaic project, the ministry plans to install 1.52 GW of solar power capacity from July 2016 to June 2018, which could attract up to NT$91.2 billion (US$2.9 billion) in investments and create 9,120 jobs a year. By the end of that period, all solar installations combined are expected to provide power capacity of 2.46 GW, generate 3.075 billion kilowatt-hours of power annually, and cut carbon emissions by nearly 1.6 million metric tons a year.
Of the 1.52 GW installed capacity, 910 megawatts (MW) will come from rooftop panels at factories, agricultural facilities and state-owned buildings. The remaining 610 MW will come from ground-level panels at salt-production land, severe land-subsidence areas, lakes and ponds, landfills and contaminated land.