World bank tailor made for asia.
Japan solar panels on the moon.
It covers 18 hectares can power nearly 5 000 homes and is saving more than 8 000 tonnes of co2 a year.
So much so that one japanese construction firm is campaigning to power the whole earth with solar energy that they will beam down from the moon.
They want to build a so called luna ring.
Japan plans to turn the moon into one huge solar power plant ever since the disaster at fukushima nuclear power plant japan has been looking to alternatives to nuclear power for their energy needs.
Atop a small hill on the southern japanese island of kyushu sits a small solar farm with big broad panels lined up in rows tilting to catch the sun.
They are aiming to apply this wireless power transmission between the earth and the moon.
The construction would stretch for 11 000 km 6 800 miles along the moon s equator and would reach 400 km 250 miles in width.
Lush vegetation creeps over the edges of the.
Weighing about 660 pounds the droids will roll on treads and operate within a 60 mile radius of the base.
The biggest japanese floating solar plant sits behind the yamakura dam at ichihara in chiba prefecture.
Shimizu a japanese architectural and engineering firm has a solution for the climate crisis.
Japan s yamakura plant is made up of almost 60 000 solar panels image.
Japanese firm plans 250 mile wide solar panel belt around moon.
One japanese company shimizu already has that covered.
As part of the 2 2 billion project the droids will begin construction of an unmanned base near the south pole of the moon that will be powered by solar panels according to the panel chaired by waseda university president katsuhiko shirai.
And yes it would look just the way it sounds a ring of solar panels spanning around the moon.
The shimizu corporation wants to essentially.
A giant solar power station.
Their ambitious plan involves building a belt of solar cells around the moon s 6 800 mile 11 000 kilometer equator converting the electricity to powerful microwaves and lasers to be beamed at earth and finally converting the beams back to electricity at terrestrial power stations.