http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn23082-japan-to-build-worlds-largest-offshore-wind-farm.html
By 2020, the plan is to build a total of 143
wind turbines on platforms 16 kilometres off the coast of Fukushima, home to
the stricken Daiichi nuclear reactor that hit the headlines in March 2011 when
it was damaged by an earthquake
and tsunami.
The wind farm, which will generate 1 gigawatt
of power once completed, is part of a national plan to increase renewable
energy resources following the post-tsunami shutdown of the nation's 54 nuclear
reactors. Only two have since come back online.
The project is part of Fukushima's plan to
become completely energy self-sufficient by 2040, using renewable sources
alone. The prefecture is also set to build the country's
biggest solar park.
The wind farm will surpass the 504 megawatts
generated by the 140 turbines at the Greater Gabbard farm off the coast of
Suffolk, UK – currently the world's largest farm. This accolade will soon pass
to the London Array in the Thames
Estuary, where 175 turbines will produce 630 megawatts of power when it comes
online later this year. The Fukushima farm will beat this, too.
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