Victoria utility installs first large-scale solar system on water tank

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Victorian utility Wannon Water is laying claim to the first large-scale solar system to be put on a utility water tank in Australia, with a 100kW array newly installed on its water treatment plant at Hamilton.
Wannon Water says it believed it is the first large-scale solar system to be installed on the roof of an Australian water utility tank, and says this will help to unlock the future potential for this type of installation for the Australian water sector.
It expects the 344 “high-efficiency” panels on the roof of the clear water storage tank will reduce the plant’s demand on the electricity grid by 25 per cent and cut greenhouse gas emissions by 150,000 kilograms each year.
It expects the $120,000 system to pay for itself in seven years through reduced energy use, and will mean that on some days the entire water treatment plant can be powered by renewable energy.
“On sunny days, the entire water treatment plant can be 100 per cent powered by renewable energy, with any excess being exported to neighbouring properties via a grid connection,” project manager Murray Dancey said in a statement.
“On its first full day of operation, the system produced enough energy to supply 70 per cent of the daily requirements for the plant which produces clean drinking water for Hamilton, Dunkeld and Tarrington.”
Contractors installed the panels on racking systems across the roof which have the advantage of being above any shading from trees or adjoining buildings. Temperature and irradiance sensors provide data to assist with automatic management.
Wannon Water installed a similar solar panel array at its Gateway Road office in Warrnambool in March and – as we have reported here – it is planning to install a wind turbine at its Portland Water Reclamation Plant.
It is also investigating the installation of renewable energy systems on its other facilities across the region.
Wannon Water aims to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, with an interim target of a 40 per cent reduction by 2025.
“It’s an excellent example of how innovative thinking can deliver multiple benefits for our customers, the environment and the communities we serve,” managing director Andrew Jeffers said in a statement.

This post was published on November 15, 2017 10:31 am

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  • Placing solar panels on top of any major water tank (dotting every city across Australia) would seem an obvious solution PROVIDED the structural integrity of the tanks can cope with the additional load.
    The various tanks/reservoirs through out the suburbs of major cities are normally placed on one of the highest locations going to help maximise water pressure down stream as it were. Synchronising the pumping of water into them to refill (as much as possible) would seem to be a perfect PV use of available electricity generated. It may require replacement of a single pump with two or more to ensure the pumps run at optimum efficiency - but that should not be too hard.

  • ABC news site 27 Sep 2017
    "Check out the size of Logan City Council's new water disinfection plant - the first in Australia to be powered entirely by a commercial-size, off-grid Tesla battery.
    Here's a look at the 323 solar panels installed on the roof to collect sunlight to be stored in the battery"

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