Renewables

Turkey started construction of its first solar module plant

Turkey started construction of its first solar panel plant

Photo: Pixabay

Published

December 26, 2017

Country

Comments

comments icon

1

Share

Published:

December 26, 2017

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

1

Share

Turkey has marked the end of this year by laying the groundwork for the Renewable Energy Resource Zone (YEKA), the country’s first photovoltaic cell and solar module plant. It should decrease country’s dependency on external energy resources. Commercial operations are expected in the first half of 2019.

The Renewable Energy Resource Zone (YEKA) will have the capacity to manufacture 800 MW of solar panels, 650 MW of solar cells and 500 MW of ingot casting. Down to road, the plant, which is also going to be research and development center (R&D), will significantly help Turkey to minimize energy dependency on external resources and will reduce energy costs.

Currently, Turkey spends USD 55 billion per year for external energy sources, Energy and Natural Resources Minister Berat Albayrak said. YEKA, as a new and expensive energy model, as Turkey media reports, is considered a breakthrough in the development of energy technologies that should save country’s overall resources.

The first YEKA project was a 1 GW solar power plant in Karapınar, a district in the central Anatolia region.

In March 2017, Kalyon-Hanhwa consortium won a tender for construction of 1 GW solar power plant under the Renewable Energy Resource Area (YEKA) scheme in Karapınarprovince.

The Korean Hanwha Q Cells company, a solar power unit of South Korean conglomerate Hanwha Group, said it would build what would be Europe’s largest solar power plant, reads the company’s statement. The Turkish government would purchase power from the plant for 30 years. The energy price would be fixed at USD 6.99 per kilowatt hour for the first half of the contract duration. After that the energy will be sold at the market price.

In addition to the manufacturing facility, Hanwha-Kalyon joint venture will also establish on-site R&D center to carry out various projects in solar technology. The manufacturing facility will be fully integrated from ingot, wafer, cell and module processes, and once completed, the module produced from this facility will be used for the construction of the 1,000 MW (AC) solar power plant to be built in Konya-Karapınar.

The tender specified that the equipment must be produced locally. At the kick-off ceremony of the plant in Ankara, Albayrak said that this investment will also create more than 1,000 jobs.

The total investment cost is estimated around USD 500 million. The plant will be built on 20 million square meters.

 

Comments (1)
Arnold Kapanga / March 14, 2021

We are looking for the company to do a EPC 200MWp PV solar power electricity generation plant in Zambia.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

Energy Community marks 20th anniversary as integration pillar for Southeastern Europe

Energy Community marks 20th anniversary as integration pillar for Southeastern Europe

17 July 2025 - The Energy Community Ministerial Council held its annual informal meeting in Athens, where the organization was founded twenty years ago

google brookfield hydropower Safe Harbor ppa us

Google signs world’s largest corporate power purchase agreement for hydropower

17 July 2025 - Brookfield said the Hydro Framework Agreement is the first of its kind and the world’s largest corporate clean power deal for hydro.

Clean transition decarbonization priorities EU draft budget

Clean transition, decarbonization among priorities in EU’s draft budget

17 July 2025 - Within the EU's proposed long-term budget, the EUR 409 billion European Competitiveness Fund is for strategic technologies including for the clean transition and decarbonization

Bulgarian firm install pilot hydropower plant pontoon Danube

Bulgarian firm to install pilot hydropower plant on pontoon on Danube

16 July 2025 - Looking to build several hydroelectric plants on pontoons on the Danube in Bulgaria, a local company intends to install a 20 kW pilot facility in Vidin