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Baking Bread in a Solar Oven

Baking Bread in a Solar Oven

Since 2019, Lebennon has been facing an economic crisis. Following decades of corrupt government financial mismanagement, banks started to impose restrictions on withdrawals. They stopped giving short-term loans to businesses and no longer provided them with US dollars for imports. As a result, this reduced the country’s ability to pay for imports, including essentials such as wheat and oil.

Moreover, many of Lebannon’s bakeries rely on expensive diesel generators for electricity because the ongoing economic crisis has devastated its power grid. In 2021, the country’s two main power plants ran out of fuel and shut down. Most households only receive about one hour of electricity per day, and the cost of food increased by 350 percent in April 2023. Many people in the country cannot even afford basic foods like bread. In some cases, the cost of a loaf has increased seven times in the space of a month.

To help feed the country’s population, an inventor, Toufic Hamdan, created a commercial bakery to bake bread in solar ovens. The startup “Partners With Sun” has installed a solar convection oven on the bakery’s roof. The Solar Oven uses large silver mirrors to capture and magnify the sun’s rays to build heat.

The heat is transported by a transfer fluid which is then used to help operate a convection oven, allowing it to reach a baking temperature of between 300 and 400 Celsius. The heat is used directly in food and beverage production. They have successfully made milk loaf, French bread and anything that can be cooked at this temperature. The Solar Oven is designed for industrial use in the baking industry.

The Solar Oven is able to cut up to 80% of the bakery’s fuel bill and improve its production efficiency. As a result, it also reduces the amount of diesel the country would have to import. As a result, it will reduce the price of the bread bundle that reaches the customer. Moreover, each bakery would save at least around 10 tonnes of diesel a month. By 2030, Toufic hopes to completely eliminate the use of diesel ovens in bakeries and rely only on solar ovens.

Lebanon is also increasing the use of solar energy for individuals and businesses. The country went from generating zero solar power in 2010 to having 90 megawatts of solar capacity in 2020. An additional 100 megawatts were added in 2021 and 500 megawatts in 2022. This is a sustainable way for people to move away from diesel and has become a stand-in for both grid-supplied electricity and private diesel generators.

Although the switch towards relying on solar power in Lebanon is now a response to the economic crisis than a reaction to climate change and air pollution, it is an inspiring way to show how we can use the earth’s resources to help our societies in times of crisis. The country now has a target to source 30% of its electricity from renewables by 2030. This switch will help provide electricity and food at reduced costs to the people of Lebanon during this economic crisis.

 

 


 

 

Source  Happy Eco News 

The Air-gen Device that Converts Humidity into Energy

The Air-gen Device that Converts Humidity into Energy

What if it were possible to create energy out of air? A purely sustainable and renewable source of energy that wouldn’t require towers or panels. Researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst have developed just that. It turns out that air humidity is a vast, sustainable reservoir of energy that is continuously available. The researchers claim that just about any surface can be turned into a generator by replicating the electrical properties of storm clouds. A storm cloud is a mass of water droplets, all of which contain a charge. When the conditions are right, the cloud can produce a lightning bolt. The researchers have used similar properties to build a small-scale cloud that can produce electricity predictably and continuously.

So how does it work? Their air generator (Air-gen) relies on microscopic holes smaller than 100 nanometres (even more minuscule than a strand of a human hair). The small diameter of these holes is called a “mean free path”, which is the distance a single molecule can travel before it collides with another molecule of the same substance.

Water molecules float all around the air, and their mean free path is around 100 nanometres. As the humid air passes through Air-gen’s minuscule holes, the water molecules will directly contact an upper and lower chamber in the film. Because each pore is so small, the water molecules would easily bump into the pore’s edge as they pass through the thin layer. This interaction creates a charge imbalance and results in electricity.

The researchers claim that their product could offer kilowatts of power for general usage as long as there is any humidity in the air. Their Air-gen device could be more space efficient and blend into the environment compared to other renewable energy options such as solar and wind power. Moreover, humidity exists at all hours of the day and night, rain or shine, to provide non-stop energy.

The researchers also claim that harvesting the air and water droplets could be designed from all kinds of materials, which offers many opportunities for cost-effective and environment-adaptable designs. The Air-gen device is so small that thousands of them could be stacked on top of each other, increasing the amount of energy it gives off without increasing the environmental footprint of the device.

This device stems from the researcher’s previous inventions of generating an electric current using moisture in the air using a microbe called Geobacter. Their device produced a sustained voltage of about 0.5 volts for about 20 hours and could light up small LED bulbs. However, they couldn’t get the microbe to create enough nanowires (the small holes that generate the electric charge) to scale up the technology further.

Their new Air-gen device has never been discovered before, and it opens up many possibilities for effectively using renewable resources to create energy. It’s incredible to think we could harvest energy from the air around us. This discovery and invention could be scaled up. They could make renewable energy more accessible to people around the world. They could reduce the negative environmental impact we see with some existing forms of renewable energy (solar panels or wind turbines).

 

 


 

 

Source Happy Eco News 

Singapore as a regional solar energy hub? It might just happen.

Singapore as a regional solar energy hub? It might just happen.

Tiny Singapore may have a big future in solar energy, thanks to a new initiative based in Australia.

The plan positions Singapore not as a generator, but as a distributor. After all, where could you put a solar array large enough to generate even Singapore’s own electricity needs, let alone the region’s? Even a ten-gigawatt array could only deliver about 20% of the nation’s demand, and that would occupy about a sixth of the island’s entire landmass.

The answer, it seems, might lie in the Australian outback, replete with sun and space. But how might an energy supplier link this resource with its customers?

Sun Cable, a Singapore-based Australian-backed company, has an answer: a 4500km cable, most of it running underseas, that would deliver power from the sun-drenched Northern Territory directly to Singapore.

 

 

It’s a hugely ambitious project that’s taken a big step forward after the Australian government granted it “major project status”. It will require AUD$22bn worth of investment, but already the company has backing from mining magnate Andrew Forrest and tech entrepreneur Mike Cannon-Brookes, two of Australia’s leading business figures.

The company hopes that the resulting infrastructure won’t just deliver solar power, but could eventually link up other sources of renewable energy to the Asian market.

“It allows Singapore to be a strategic hub as renewable energy starts to develop,” says the company’s Chief Strategy Officer Fraser Thompson. “There’s no reason why Singapore couldn’t put itself at the heart of the ASEAN power grid, and it benefits from all those ancillary services that come with that.”

 

‘A fantastic solar resource’

Ultimately, Sun Cable hopes to sell power across the region, but it’s starting in Singapore for a number of reasons. The regulatory environment is favourable, the country has a strong record of innovation, and it also has a need for more renewable sources.

“Singapore has a real imperative to diversify its energy,” says Thompson. “Once the piped gas from Indonesia ends in about 2023 or 2025, you basically have a system which is 95% dependent on LNG. And that comes with a whole set of other risks, not to mention the climate change imperative and carbon reduction.”

Recognising this, the nation state has been experimenting with solar technology in the form of rooftop generation and offshore floating solar arrays. But, Thompson says, the cloud cover in Southeast Asia means that solar panels just aren’t as efficient as in Australia, which boasts some of the best solar energy potential in the world.

According to Geosciences Australia, Australia has the highest solar radiation per square metre of any continent, particularly in the desert regions in the northwest and centre of the continent, where Sun Cable will build its array, which Thompson estimates can produce 31% more energy than a similar one in Southeast Asia.

In the initial phase of development, the first cable would be able to supply some 20% of Singapore’s electricity requirements. Subsequent cables will then be laid to deliver further supply to Indonesia, and then to the rest of ASEAN.

 

Why now?

So if Australia is a great place to generate solar energy, and Southeast Asia is a great place to sell it, why hasn’t anybody attempted to connect the two previously? Put simply, it has always been either too technically difficult or too expensive.

Thompson acknowledges that the project wouldn’t have been possible even a few years ago, but he thinks it is now – for two reasons. First, because solar has become much cheaper. But secondly – and more importantly – because of what he describes as a “silent revolution” in power transmission.

Advances in High Voltage Direct Current mean that less power is lost between the solar panels in the desert and the powerpoint. At the same time, building the infrastructure is becoming easier because undersea cables can be placed deeper than before as the shipping and marine infrastructure to lay the cables has improved.

Professor Subodh Mhaisalkar, Executive Director of the Energy Research Institute at Nanyang Technological University, is enthusiastic about the project’s potential. “It would be incredible if it could be realised,” he says. However, the challenge doesn’t stop at getting the power to Singapore.

He points to the absence of an integrated regional grid that would allow for the broader distribution of power, and to the possibility of competition with other distributors looking to export the sustainable energies generated closer to home, such as thermal power from Indonesia and hydroelectric power from Laos and Sarawak.

And then there are the underlying economic realities. Can Sun Cable, with its large infrastructure costs, compete with power sources that don’t have to build expensive undersea cables? Can it compete with local projects that only need to plug into an existing grid? “It would have to under-bid the current fleet, which may not provide enough revenue for the project to cover its capex,” says Professor Tony Owen, an independent energy expert who previously worked at the Energy Studies Institute at the National University of Singapore.

 

Grander vision

Thompson thinks the numbers add up, and he’s hopeful the project will be supplying power to customers in Singapore by 2027. If the project is successful, Sun Cable hopes that it will be just the beginning of an export market for renewable energy.

“The grander vision that Sun Cable has is to create a connected grid across Asia that takes everything from the wind assets in New Zealand through to the solar in other parts of Asia, and effectively harnesses that.”

With the region’s overall energy demand growing fast – up by more than 80% since 2000, the solution won’t come a moment too soon.

 


 

By Timothy McDonald

Source: Tech For Impact