SCIENCE

Solar power stations in space ‘more sensible than nuclear energy’

The European Space Agency’s Solaris project will look at using high-frequency radio waves, or low-power microwaves, to beam energy back to Earth
The European Space Agency’s Solaris project will look at using high-frequency radio waves, or low-power microwaves, to beam energy back to Earth
ESA

Solar power plants built in space could make more sense than nuclear plants on the ground as the world moves away from fossil fuels for generating electricity, experts have said.

The European Space Agency (ESA), of which the UK is a member, is assessing plans that would involve a satellite several miles long being assembled by robots in orbit.

It would carry a solar array that would be illuminated by the sun for more than 99 per cent of the time, allowing it to produce power day and night and no matter the weather on Earth.

The energy would be beamed back to the ground via high frequency radio waves. Advocates of the technology believe that a single plant could deliver 2GW of renewable power