The City of Cape Town has taken its first leap toward energy sustainability by awarding the tender for its very first solar plant, the groundbreaking Atlantis Solar Photovoltaic Plant.
An innovative bike designed built in Africa and powered only by the sun will take a 6,000-kilometre electric trek to help drive the green revolution – talk about ‘African ingenuity’.
More than a dozen teams battled it out in an intense, eight-day race, covering thousands of kilometres and ever-shifting weather and terrain that pushed the designers to their limits.
They’re doing it by sending a big mirror into space, aboard a satellite that’s able to point said mirror in such a way as to reflect the sun’s light onto a precise location on Earth.
GoodLuck’s collaboration with Versofy Solar is almost too obvious to have taken this long, and since partnering up, the band has been able to keep the vibe going even when Eskom hits all the wrong notes.
The local production of solar panels received a multi-million-rand boost thanks to the Western Cape’s commitment to a green economy, but that’s not the most impressive part.
The City of Cape Town has announced that it will now pay cash for power fed into the local electricity grid.
Eskom’s nonsense is driving a new era of solar, where more homeowners are keen to implement alternate power solutions.
Not only is Eskom’s nonsense driving this new era of solar, but also the country’s growing focus on renewable sources of power and disinvestment in coal.
We’re all keen to cut out the need to rely on Eskom, and that’s especially true for some of our country’s farmers. Get ready for the red tape brigade.
Are you ready for the future? With solar tiles that charge your electric car, and provide energy for the rest of your house, Elon Musk has it down.
Now more than ever we need to be looking at alternative energy sources. Here’s the latest solar-powered gadget to help you out around the house
A smart-thinking couple look to have revolutionised road-safety with their new invention.
Well, they don’t want to put solar panels ALL OVER the moon, they just want to to put a cheeky little 400 kilometer-wide belt of solar panels around the moon. Casual.
What did you do today? New York elementary school student Aidan Dwyer has designed and constructed a solar array based on the Fibonacci sequence that stores and generates energy between 20% and 50% more effectively than existing setups. He got the idea after noticing growth patterns in oak trees.