Te Rāhui Solar Farm
Appearance
Te Rāhui Solar Farm | |
---|---|
Country | New Zealand |
Location | Taupō District |
Coordinates | 38°53′44.49″S 176°25′25.55″E / 38.8956917°S 176.4237639°E |
Status | Consented |
Owner | Nova Energy |
Solar farm | |
Type | Flat-panel PV |
Collectors | 900,000 |
Site area | 1022 ha |
Power generation | |
Nameplate capacity | 400 MW |
Annual net output | 650 GWh [1] |
The Te Rāhui solar farm is a proposed photovoltaic power station in the Taupō District of New Zealand. It is to be built on a 1022 hectare site 35 km east of Taupō.[2] The farm will be owned by Nova Energy and will be the largest in New Zealand when complete.[3]
The project applied for resource consent in September 2022.[4] Resource consent was granted in November 2022.[2]
In July 2024 Nova announced that the farm would be called Te Rāhui and would be built in two stages.[5] In December 2024 Nova announced that it had signed a joint venture agreement with Meridian Energy to build and operate the farm.[6]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ David Carroll (19 September 2022). "Todd proposes 400 MW solar farm for New Zealand's North Island". PV Magazine. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
- ^ a b Matthew Martin (11 November 2022). "Green light to create New Zealand's largest solar farm, with 900,000 panels". Stuff. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
- ^ Marc Daalder (12 April 2022). "NZ's largest solar farm to be built near Taupō". Newsroom. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
- ^ Matthew Martin (5 September 2022). "Massive solar farm project near Taupō about to see the light". Stuff. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
- ^ Matthew Martin (1 July 2024). "NZ's largest solar farm gets the go ahead". Waikato Times. Retrieved 1 July 2024.
- ^ Jamie Gray (20 December 2024). "Meridian, Nova join forces for $660m solar project near Taupō". New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 20 December 2024.