Renewables

Floods in Greece drown hundreds of photovoltaic plants

floods

Photo: Panhellenic Agricultural Photovoltaics Association (AFO)

Published

September 11, 2023

Country

Comments

comments icon

1

Share

Published:

September 11, 2023

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

1

Share

Many photovoltaic plants in the region of Thessaly in Greece have been severely affected by last week’s extreme floods, as water levels exceeded 1.6 meters.

Greek photovoltaic producers have taken a big hit as a result of the rain and flooding that hit the country during the previous week. The worst floods were in Thessaly in Central Greece, home to many commercial photovoltaic plants and ones built by farmers.

The region comprises four districts: Larissa, Trikala, Karditsa and Magnesia. They were all hit by torrential rains, the worst ever recorded in the country.

According to the Panhellenic Agricultural Photovoltaics Association (AFO), which gathers farmers, 80 of its members reported damages to their ground installations. Their extent in other solar power projects remains unknown. There are more than 2,500 units in the region, with about 1,000 MW in total capacity.

AFO added that the flood mostly damaged fences around the plants, power inverters and substations. There were also cases where the panels themselves were affected, though they are usually higher off the ground.

Producers turn to insurance

Insurance is expected to cover a part of the damages, although it depends on the terms of individual contracts. Usually they cover about 10% of damages and the production lost for a few weeks or months. Therefore, it is possible that producers will suffer losses despite insurance claims.

As a first step, they will have to properly identify and present the damage. According to AFO, out of the 80 affected members, only two had not insured their investments.

Spanoulis: Billions in damages for the region

The association’s chairman Kostas Spanoulis told Sky News it was a unique weather phenomenon and that total damages for the local economy are calculated in billions of euros.

Since a large part of Greece’s agricultural production is in Thessaly, early estimates are that 20% to 22% of the country’s crops would be lost and take years to recover as a result of ground degradation. The government has already called the European Union for emergency assistance ahead of the upcoming winter.

Comments (1)
Kenis / January 11, 2024

I will like to buy all the flooded solar panels,

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

Record battery installations EU 2025 Bulgaria enters top 3

Record battery installations in EU in 2025 as Bulgaria enters top 3

28 January 2026 - The European Union added 27.1 GWh of battery capacity last year, marking a 12th consecutive record – driven by utility-scale storage

croatia ante susnjar minister renewables subsidies jutarnji list energy conference

Šušnjar: Croatia allocated EUR 4 billion so far to boost renewables; subsidies for wind, solar to end

28 January 2026 - Minister of Economy Ante Šušnjar said at an energy conference that the money could have been put to better use

Research project in Romania explores the use of agrisolar systems with batteries in agriculture

Researchers in Romania developing agrisolar system with batteries

27 January 2026 - An agrisolar power plant with batteries is being set up in a research and demonstration project in Romania

ContourGlobal enters Greece with battery projects small PV plants purchase

ContourGlobal enters Greece with battery projects, small PV plants purchase

27 January 2026 - KKR-owned ContourGlobal bought a group of small PV plants in Greece, alongside a portfolio of battery storage projects totaling 500 MW