Renewable Energy

Vietnam launches country’s largest solar farm

Vietnam’s Trung Nam Group launched a 450-megawatt solar farm, the largest of its kind in the SE Asian country, which is seeking to boost the proportion of renewables while reducing dependence on coal in its power mix. Located in the central coastal province of Ninh Thuan, the 14 trillion dong ($604 million) solar farm is hooked up to the national grid via a 17 km (10.6 miles) transmission line, also built by Trung Nam.

Facing an imminent electricity shortage, Vietnam is developing renewables, along with LNG-to-power and coal-based projects, as hydropower has been almost fully tapped while oil and gas production has peaked. Plans to build nuclear power plants were scrapped in 2016. Vietnam plans to raise the proportion of solar and wind energy in its power mix to 15%-20% by 2030 and to 25%-30% by 2045, from 10% currently.

The company said the solar farm, along with its other solar and wind power projects, will help ease the country’s imminent power shortage and diversify power sources.

Nguyen Tam Tien, CEO, Trung Nam said, “Vietnam’s solar and wind energy potential is immense and the country is on the right track to rapidly and effectively tap this potential.”

Vietnam is also building a fleet of LNG-to-power plants, with the first to be operational by 2023, an ambitious move that could turn LNG into a major energy source for the country.

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