zaterdag 18 april 2026

South Korea just activated a 900-square-kilometer offshore solar installation in the Yellow Sea — the largest single solar facility ever completed, generating 9,000 megawatts from a panel array so large it is clearly visible from low Earth orbit, covers the electricity needs of 7 million Korean homes — nearly 30 percent of all South Korean households

 


South Korea just activated a 900-square-kilometer offshore solar installation in the Yellow Sea — the largest single solar facility ever completed, generating 9,000 megawatts from a panel array so large it is clearly visible from low Earth orbit.
The Saemangeum Offshore Solar Extension deploys floating solar panels across 900 square kilometers of Yellow Sea shallow water, anchoring platforms to the 5-to-8-meter seabed. Combined output of 9,000 megawatts covers the electricity needs of 7 million Korean homes — nearly 30 percent of all South Korean households — from a single contiguous offshore installation. Anti-fouling coatings prevent marine organism attachment and corrosion-resistant titanium hardware is rated for 40-year marine service life.
Yellow Sea surface water provides natural panel cooling improving efficiency by 12 percent. Massive shading beneath the installation creates a protected nursery environment for juvenile fish — Korean fisheries researchers documented 230 percent higher juvenile fish density beneath the array in the first operational season.
Source: Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power, Korean Ministry of Ocean and Fisheries, Korea Energy Agency, 2025

A man in Indonesia found a simple way to help his community move through flooded areas during the rainy season. Using bamboo,

 


A man in Indonesia found a simple way to help his community move through flooded areas during the rainy season. Using bamboo, he built a floating walkway that rises and falls with the water, creating a stable path above submerged ground.
The structure is lightweight yet strong, with bamboo poles tied together to form a flexible surface that adjusts naturally to changing water levels. It allows villagers to walk across safely without needing boats for short distances, making daily movement much easier.
Over time, this handmade solution became an essential part of the area’s routine. What began as one person’s idea turned into a shared lifeline — showing how local materials and practical thinking can solve everyday challenges in a meaningful way.

Kenya just completed the Olkaria VII Geothermal Complex in the East African Rift Valley — adding 1,000 megawatts of clean capacity and making Kenya the first African country where more than 50 percent of national electricity comes from geothermal energy.

 


Kenya just completed the Olkaria VII Geothermal Complex in the East African Rift Valley — adding 1,000 megawatts of clean capacity and making Kenya the first African country where more than 50 percent of national electricity comes from geothermal energy.
The East African Rift is one of Earth's most geothermally active zones, where tectonic plates pull apart at 6 millimeters annually, bringing volcanic heat to commercially drillable depths across thousands of square kilometers. Olkaria VII adds 50 new production wells averaging 20 megawatts each and a dedicated transmission line connecting to Nairobi's industrial zone.
Kenya now generates electricity at 3.2 US cents per kilowatt-hour from geothermal — cheaper than coal anywhere in sub-Saharan Africa and available 24 hours daily regardless of weather, making Kenyan manufacturing energy costs competitive with any industrial nation.
Source: KenGen Kenya Electricity Generating Company, Kenya Power, African Development Bank, 2025

Singapore just opened Tuas Mega Port Phase 4 — the world's first fully autonomous container terminal where every crane, truck, and container movement operates through AI and robotics with zero human workers required anywhere on the dock surface at any time.

 


Singapore just opened Tuas Mega Port Phase 4 — the world's first fully autonomous container terminal where every crane, truck, and container movement operates through AI and robotics with zero human workers required anywhere on the dock surface at any time.
The Tuas Phase 4 terminal covers 1,000 hectares of reclaimed land, deploying 1,200 autonomous electric vehicles, 98 automated ship-to-shore cranes, and a complete underground container sorting system operated entirely by AI logistics software. Ships arrive, berth automatically using LIDAR-guided docking, unload through robot cranes, and depart without any human interaction at any stage. Container throughput reaches 65 million twenty-foot equivalent units annually while operating costs run 40 percent below conventional human-operated ports globally.
Port Authority of Singapore reports that Tuas Phase 4 automates operations previously requiring 8,000 dock workers, who have been fully retrained for maritime technology monitoring and maintenance roles across Singapore's expanded port operations network.
Source: Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore, PSA International Singapore, Singapore Economic Development Board, 2025

Sweden just completed Europe's largest data center waste heat recovery program — connecting Stockholm's district heating network to 24 data centers whose cooling waste heat now warms 200,000 Swedish homes

 


Sweden just completed Europe's largest data center waste heat recovery program — connecting Stockholm's district heating network to 24 data centers whose cooling waste heat now warms 200,000 Swedish homes, turning discarded computing heat into a free renewable heating resource for an entire city.
Stockholm Data Parks operates 24 data centers with heat recovery systems capturing 97 percent of server cooling heat rather than expelling it outdoors. Recovered heat at 35 to 55 degrees Celsius transfers to Stockholm's district heating pipes through heat pumps boosting temperature to 80 degrees for residential distribution. Data center operators receive reduced electricity costs through the heat exchange agreement while Stockholm Exergi eliminates biomass fuel equivalent to 800,000 tonnes of CO2 annually from its heating portfolio.
Global data centers collectively waste heat equivalent to heating every home in Europe. Stockholm's model demonstrates that urban data center clusters can supply significant city heating fractions from energy currently disappearing into the atmosphere, requiring only heat pump infrastructure and contractual integration with existing district heating systems.
Source: Stockholm Exergi, Stockholm Data Parks, Swedish Energy Agency, 2025