Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Earth

The $20B Plan To Power Singapore With Australian Solar (theguardian.com) 127

The desert outside Tennant Creek, deep in the Northern Territory, is not the most obvious place to build and transmit Singapore's future electricity supply. Though few in the southern states are yet to take notice, a group of Australian developers are betting that will change. From a report: If they are right, it could have far-reaching consequences for Australia's energy industry and what the country sells to the world. Known as Sun Cable, it is promised to be the world's largest solar farm. If developed as planned, a 10-gigawatt-capacity array of panels will be spread across 15,000 hectares and be backed by battery storage to ensure it can supply power around the clock. Overhead transmission lines will send electricity to Darwin and plug into the NT grid. But the bulk would be exported via a high-voltage direct-current submarine cable snaking through the Indonesian archipelago to Singapore. The developers say it will be able to provide one-fifth of the island city-state's electricity needs, replacing its increasingly expensive gas-fired power.

After 18 months in development, the $20bn Sun Cable development had a quiet coming out party in the Top End three weeks ago at a series of events held to highlight the NT's solar potential. The idea has been embraced by the NT government and attracted the attention of the software billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes, who is considering involvement through his Grok Ventures private investment firm. The NT plan follows a similarly ambitious proposal for the Pilbara, where another group of developers are working on an even bigger wind and solar hybrid plant to power local industry and develop a green hydrogen manufacturing hub. On Friday, project developer Andrew Dickson announced the scale of the proposed Asian Renewable Energy Hub had grown by more than a third, from 11GW to 15GW. "To our knowledge, it's the largest wind-solar hybrid in the world," he says.

Comment If my kids get profiled, expect a lawsuit (Score 1) 639

I'm with you. I'm the first generation programmer in my family but I fit most of these characteristics. I'll be teaching my kids that too question anything they don't find right including authority and if they get in trouble for it I'll stand behind them 100%. My son is only two but he already knows how to use a mouse better than a lot of my family and knows how to put cds in and such. Does this mean he will become a murderer?

If I ever find out that this sort of profiling is done to my children, it won't be my kids they have to be concerned about, it will be the big fat lawsuit coming their way.

The problem with the school system is there is no outlet for these children. Jocks get their football fields, pep rallies, and can get away with just about anything while the above average intelligent kid gets profiled. Instead of spending money for new lights for the football field maybe funnel a little money to the academic programs that these kids might join.

And make it so teachers can't coach and make all extra curricular activities city/town related instaed of school related... this would definitely cut down on favoritism.

Lets get start profiling people based on whether they are left, right or both handed. I'm willing to bet that there are more right handed psychopaths so lets start by targeting them.

Slashdot Top Deals

Time is an illusion perpetrated by the manufacturers of space.

Working...