Sembcorp Floating Solar Singapore, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sembcorp Industries, and Singapore's national water agency PUB on Wednesday announced the official opening of the Sembcorp Tengeh Floating Solar Farm at the Tengeh Reservoir.
With this, Singapore is one of the few countries in the world to have a waterworks system that is fully solar-powered. The farm will also contribute to Singapore's goal of quadrupling solar energy deployment by 2025.
The launch ceremony on Wednesday was officiated by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong; Minister for Sustainability and the Environment Grace Fu, and the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment Albert Chua, as well as top executives from Sembcorp and PUB.
During his speech at the opening of the Sembcorp Tengeh Floating Solar Farm, Mr Lee noted that Singapore is now one of the most solar-dense cities in the world, having grown its solar capacity by more than seven times since 2015. Singapore also plans to install at least two giga-watt peak of solar photovoltaic capacity by 2030.
"Innovations such as floating solar farms will help us overcome our physical constraints," said Mr Lee. "I hope this project will give our solar and renewable energy industry a boost, and pave the way for more such facilities to be built here and in the region.
"This will take us one big step towards environmental sustainability, as we transition into a low-carbon future."
The 60 megawatt-peak solar photovoltaic farm has some 122,000 solar panels spanning across 45 hectares, or the equivalent of about 45 football fields. This makes it one of the world's largest inland floating solar photovoltaic farms.
Both PUB and Sembcorp first began exploring the possibility of floating solar photovoltaics in Singapore back in 2011.
After a "decade-long journey" that involved engineering and environment feasibility studies and extensive comparisons between different technologies and designs, solar panels in the Sembcorp Tengeh Floating Solar Farm are expected to perform 5 to 15 per cent better than conventional rooftop solar panels, according to a test-bed at the reservoir that was constructed in 2016.
The electricity generated from the solar farm will be sufficient to power Singapore's five local water treatment plants, offsetting about 7 per cent of PUB's annual energy needs. The farm will also reduce carbon emissions by about 32 kilotonnes every year, or the same as taking 7,000 cars off the road.