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Bengaluru’s Kempegowda International Airport is aiming to meet 40 percent of its power needs through clean energy by next year.
This comes against the backdrop of Kerala’s Cochin airport becoming the first airport in the world to run fully on solar power in August this year.
Mint reports that Bangalore International Airport Ltd (BIAL) – the company responsible for running the airport – is currently evaluating bids from companies, which will harness solar power by building solar panels alongside the runway and at the car park.
The Union Ministry of New and Renewable Energy had earlier targeted solar power capacity of 100 GW by 2022, and this move is going to help the cause.
The report also says BIAL is looking to generate 14.6 MW of solar power compared to the Kerala airport, which commissioned a 12 megawatt solar project in August.
An official associated with Green Power Market Development Group (India) at World Resources Institute – an environmental research institute – is quoted in the report as saying, “Having suitable weather conditions to harness solar power, going green could yield economic and environmental benefits for the airport.”
Cochin International Airport Ltd director A C K Nair told Mint that he doubts if buying 20 million units of solar power from the open market will be viable, adding “We didn’t go for open access route because it requires a large extent of land and there is a shortage of suppliers and the cost is high. But it has a positive side.”
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