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INSIGHTS

Cambodia Is Perfectly Positioned to Become a Solar Powerhouse

Cambodia Is Perfectly Positioned to Become a Solar Powerhouse
Phnom Penh’s first solar-powered building looks for all the world like a cube of colored Lego blocks dropped in a factory lot on the city’s industrial outskirts. Covered in some 1,350 solar panels — including large panes of multi-colored solar glass — the three-story building has the capacity to produce up to 135 kilow
Phnom Penh's first solar-powered building looks for all the world like a cube of colored Lego blocks dropped in a factory lot on the city's industrial outskirts. Covered in some 1,350 solar panels — including large panes of multi-colored solar glass — the three-story building has the capacity to produce up to 135 kilowatts of power per hour of sunlight. The roof above the building's parking lot is covered with solar tiles, and the product showroom across the road is fronted by even more.

For Star8, the Australia-based company that inhabits this futuristic facility, it stands as a testament to the great potential of solar technology in Cambodia. “The solar radiation here is phenomenal,” says Star8's managing director Philip Stone. “It will revitalize and bring Cambodia into the 21st century.”

Star8's most futuristic plan is to build a solar roadway made of specially engineered slip-resistant glass. Stone says the components are ready, and the company is talking with a developer who owns concessions on National Road 4, the highway linking Phnom Penh to the coastal resort town of Sihanoukville. After building a test stretch of roadway, the ambition is to produce 140 kilometers (86 miles) of highway with the potential to light itself and provide grid-quality power for villages along the way.
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