this post was submitted on 01 Nov 2024
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UK-based company Space Solar is partnering with Reykjavik Energy and Icelandic sustainability initiative Transition Labs to develop a space-based solar power plant that can deliver about 30 megawatts of electricity – potentially enough to power between 1,500 and 3,000 homes – from 2030. The system will collect sunlight in space through solar panels and then transmit it as radio waves at a specific frequency to a ground station, where it will be converted to electricity for the grid.

The satellite is expected to be scalable and quite big. Even if a full version of their CASSIOPeiA power array is not built, we are talking about the heaviest single object in space that is not a space station, and when all the arrays are splayed out, much larger than the International Space Station.

The company aims to have a scaled-up version of the system in space by 2036, which would supply gigawatts of electricity.

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[–] arniolaf@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

We don’t need to heat the water, it’s already hot when it comes from the ground 😀

Well there are places where the cold water is heated up using the hot water before it goes to peoples houses because the original hot water smells and tastes bad…

And where the pavements and walkways are heated it’s the exess water flowing away after being used to heat the houses not the other way around