Thursday, 20 August 2015

Cochin international airport to be India's first to Run on solar power














 Cochin International Airport is all set to become the first airport in the country which would  be operating on solar power, airport officials said today.

 Kerala Chief Minister Oommen Chandy will inaugurate the Cochin International Airport  Limited's (CIAL) green initiative - a 12MWp solar power project set up on the premises of  the airport on August 18, Airport Managing Director V J Kurien told reporters in Kochi.

 When the photovoltaics (PV) panels laid across 45 acres near cargo complex become  functional, Cochin airport will have 50,000 to 60,000 units of electricity per day to be  consumed for all its operational functions, which will technically make the airport "absolutely  power neutral".

 CIAL, which has adorned many firsts in its cap, like being the pioneer in PPP model in  building an airport to introducing a path-breaking rehabilitation package for evictees, has  ventured into the Solar PV sector during March 2013, by installing a 100 kWp solar PV  Plant on the roof top of the Arrival Terminal Block.

 This was a trend setter in the field of grid-connected solar PV in the state of Kerala.

 After the successful commissioning of this plant, CIAL installed a 1 MWp solar PV power  plant partly on the roof top and partly on the ground in the Aircraft Maintenance Hangar  facility within the Airport premises.

 Both these plants are equipped with a SCADA system, through which remote monitoring is  carried out. After commissioning, these plants have so far saved more than 550MT of CO2  emission contributing to the efforts of CIAL towards minimizing environmental degradation.

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