A remote tropical island in
the South Pacific has managed to rid itself of its reliance on diesel
and is now completely powered by solar energy.
Ta’u Island, part of American
Samoa, is using more than 5,000 solar panels and 60 Tesla power packs to run
the entire island.
Before the move to renewable
energy, the island, which is home to 600 people and located 4,000 miles off the
west coast of the US, was dependent on 100,000 gallons of diesel to survive.
Utu Abe Malae, executive
director of the American Samoa Power Authority, said although it was not easy
to implement, it is “the future” for all islands in the area.
Previously Ta’u Island would
grind to stand-still when bad weather prevented ferries transporting diesel
from docking, but now, due to the new technology, the island is completely
self-sufficient.
“Shipping diesel has been a
long-standing environmental risk, and an inefficient use of taxpayers’ money,”
the Guardian reported
Mr Malae as saying.
“We want all of American Samoa
to be solar-powered by 2040 – but Ta’u has been the priority and test-run.”
Construction of the grid began
two years ago and had been delayed due to technical issues and poor weather.
Solar engineers from contractors Tesla and SolarCity flew out from California
to help oversee construction.
“The ferries to the island
would often break down, so then we’d have to flag down nearby fishing boats to
transport the solar panels, and then they’d have to pass the panels to
row-boats to reach the island. Nothing about this project went smoothly at
all,” Mr Malae added.
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