dinsdag 7 april 2026

Denmark just completed the most ambitious urban solar program in European history — every rooftop in Copenhagen now generates clean electricity, making the Danish capital a net electricity exporter

 


Denmark just completed the most ambitious urban solar program in European history — every rooftop in Copenhagen now generates clean electricity, making the Danish capital a net electricity exporter that sells surplus power to Sweden and Germany while powering itself entirely from rooftop sun.
The Copenhagen Solar Capital Initiative covered 94,000 rooftops across the city's 99 square kilometers with bifacial solar panels over four years, adding 1.8 gigawatts of distributed capacity to a city previously dependent on centralized generation from offshore wind. Copenhagen's latitude at 55 degrees north provides 1,750 annual sunshine hours — modest by global standards — but the sheer density and area of urban rooftop coverage compensates through scale, with city-wide panel area of 47 square kilometers generating electricity equivalent to a medium-sized offshore wind farm. Building-integrated battery storage at each property provides 8 hours of demand coverage, ensuring continued supply through low-generation periods without requiring grid upgrades.
Copenhagen's electricity demand reaches 900 megawatts during peak summer daytime hours. The 1.8 gigawatts of rooftop solar generates 2.1 gigawatts on clear midsummer days, leaving 1.2 gigawatts of surplus exported across Oresund interconnectors to Sweden's grid and through the Great Belt cable to German power markets. Export revenue funds the program's remaining installation costs and creates net positive cash flow for Copenhagen's municipality by the third year of operation.
Copenhagen becomes the first European capital where electricity bills for residential customers have turned net positive — households receive monthly payments for electricity exported rather than paying for consumption.
Source: Copenhagen Municipality Energy Department, Energinet Denmark, Danish Energy Regulatory Authority, 2025

Saudi Arabia just activated the largest single solar installation ever built — 300 square kilometers of Neom desert covered with 9 million panels generating clean electricity for 5 million homes

 


Saudi Arabia just activated the largest single solar installation ever built — 300 square kilometers of Neom desert covered with 9 million panels generating clean electricity for 5 million homes from nothing but desert sunshine.
The Neom Solar Mega-Complex Phase 2 covers a continuous 300-square-kilometer expanse of flat Tabuk Province desert with single-axis tracking bifacial panels that follow the sun from dawn to dusk, capturing direct overhead radiation on their upper face and reflected desert ground radiation on their lower face simultaneously. Located at 1,400 meters elevation where the atmosphere is thinner and solar radiation intensity 12 percent higher than sea level, the installation generates 4,200 megawatts at peak capacity — more than four nuclear reactors combined from a single desert site. Saudi Arabia's interior desert receives 3,200 hours of annual sunshine with virtually zero cloud cover, giving the installation a capacity factor of 32 percent — exceptionally high for any solar installation anywhere on Earth.
The project required 28,000 workers over three years and 47 million tons of structural steel, with panels imported from Saudi Arabia's own new solar manufacturing plants rather than from overseas suppliers for the first time. Transmission infrastructure carries generated electricity 380 kilometers to Riyadh and Jeddah through a dedicated 500-kilovolt direct current line losing only 2.8 percent of energy over that distance.
Saudi Arabia plans three additional mega-complexes of comparable scale by 2030, targeting 50 percent renewable electricity nationally from desert solar alone.
Source: ACWA Power Saudi Arabia, Saudi Vision 2030 Renewable Energy Program, Saudi Electricity Company, 2025

Finland just opened the world's first underground autonomous cargo transport network — a 1,200-kilometer tunnel system beneath the Helsinki-Tampere-Turku triangle

 


Finland just opened the world's first underground autonomous cargo transport network — a 1,200-kilometer tunnel system beneath the Helsinki-Tampere-Turku triangle where electric robots move freight continuously underground, replacing all long-haul trucks on Finland's three busiest surface road corridors.
The EcoTube Finland network consists of a 4-meter diameter concrete tube running 10 to 30 meters below ground, carrying autonomous electric cargo pods at 120 kilometers per hour between 47 underground freight terminals located beneath major industrial areas, logistics hubs, and port facilities. Each pod carries up to 30 tons of cargo in standardized containers, loading and unloading automatically at terminals through robotic handling systems with no human operators required at any stage. The system operates 24 hours per day, 365 days per year regardless of surface weather conditions, with no traffic congestion, no accidents, and zero surface land use beyond terminal entrance portals.
Finland's Helsinki-Tampere route carries 18,000 trucks daily, creating severe congestion, road wear costing 340 million euros annually, and significant air quality impacts on communities along the corridor. Underground cargo transfer to EcoTube reduced truck traffic on surface roads by 73 percent within the first operational year, cutting road maintenance costs, improving urban air quality, and reducing freight delivery times by 31 percent through elimination of congestion delays.
The pods run entirely on electricity from Finland's renewable-heavy national grid, making cargo transport between Finland's three largest cities effectively carbon free for the first time in the country's history.
Source: Finnish Transport Infrastructure Agency, EcoTube Finland Consortium, Finnish Ministry of Transport and Communications, 2025

South Korea just built the world's first underground solar farm — a system that collects sunlight at the surface and carries it 500 meters below ground through fiber optic cables

 


South Korea just built the world's first underground solar farm — a system that collects sunlight at the surface and carries it 500 meters below ground through fiber optic cables to power underground facilities without any electrical conversion, delivering pure photons directly to plants, equipment, and lighting systems deep underground.
The Gyeonggi Underground Solar Facility uses 240 solar concentrator dishes on the surface above a former underground military installation, focusing sunlight into bundles of 1,000 fiber optic cables that carry photons directly to underground growing rooms, work spaces, and lighting installations 500 meters below. Unlike conventional solar systems that convert light to electricity and back to light — losing 70 percent of energy in the conversion process — direct photon transmission through fiber optics delivers sunlight at 94 percent efficiency, making underground spaces genuinely solar-powered rather than merely electrically powered by solar generation. Underground plant growing rooms receive the same spectral composition as natural sunlight rather than artificial grow light approximations, enabling crop yields matching outdoor growing performance.
The 500-meter depth provides natural temperature stability at 14 degrees Celsius year-round, dramatically reducing cooling and heating energy for underground facilities. Combined with direct solar fiber illumination, the underground facility operates at 23 percent of the energy cost of equivalent surface facilities. South Korea's densely populated geography makes underground space valuable — this technology enables agriculture, data centers, and manufacturing in subsurface space beneath urban areas where surface land costs make equivalent facilities economically impossible.
South Korea's Ministry of Science approved expansion to 15 additional underground facilities serving agricultural and industrial applications by 2028.
Source: Korea Institute of Science and Technology, South Korean Ministry of Science ICT, Renewable Energy Journal, 2025

Across Norway, engineers are developing a massive ship tunnel carved directly through mountains, designed to let vessels bypass some of the country’s most dangerous coastal waters.

 


Across Norway, engineers are developing a massive ship tunnel carved directly through mountains, designed to let vessels bypass some of the country’s most dangerous coastal waters. Norway’s rugged coastline is known for strong currents, narrow passages, and unpredictable weather, making certain sea routes risky even for experienced crews. This tunnel offers a safer alternative, allowing ships to travel through solid rock instead of navigating hazardous waters.
The structure is being designed large enough to accommodate full-sized ships, including cargo vessels and passenger ferries. By cutting through the mountain, the tunnel creates a controlled passage where waves, wind, and currents no longer pose a threat. This not only improves safety but also ensures more reliable travel schedules, especially during storms when traditional routes may be closed.
Beyond safety, the project reflects how large-scale engineering can adapt to natural geography rather than fight against it. Instead of reshaping the sea, Norway is creating a protected path within the landscape itself. It shows how infrastructure can solve long-standing challenges, turning a difficult journey into a smoother, more secure route for maritime transport.