Vietnam tries non-profit solar power generation

For the 2.5 million Vietnamese who don’t have access to electricity, solar power may provide some hope.

Three percent of Vietnam’s population live in very remote villages and don’t have access to the grid. But according to a report by industry newsletter Thin Film Today, the Hanoi government in May entered an agreement with Schneider Electric Vietnam to build a solar power station in Quang Binh, in the north of the country. The station will use concentrated photovoltaic to provide electric power.

The project was described as “non-profit” and it “aims to minimize the negative effect on the environment and promote the use of green, clean, sustainable energy.”

It is a small-scale project with a 11kW capacity that will benefit 35 households. But it is part of a national drive to power those excluded by the grid.

The Qaung Bihn project eventually will be compatible and connectable to the regular grid. It is part of the suggestively named Bip-Bop (Business, Innovation & People at the Base Of the Pyramid) program, a community-based scheme to bring sustainable electricity to rural areas across the globe. This will be the first Bip-Bop program in Vietnam.

Source: Thin Film Today. To find out more about Bip-Bop, please visit their website.

Related Posts:

About the author

Antonio Pasolini

London-based, Italo-Brazilian journalist and friend of the earth.

View all posts

1 Comment

  • Sustainable energy solutions should be the only consideration for the production of new energy sources. The wind, the sun, and the waves are all we should ever need.