British Isles test solar panels that can expand like carpets

Solar panels that can be deployed like carpets can provide portable power solutions for disaster areas and the like. According to foreign media reports, the British Cardiff Commission is testing this technology on an island off the Welsh coast as a new way to meet future energy needs. Flexible solar panels greatly save the space occupied by solar panels. We have seen some consumer products designed to take advantage of this, such as flexible HeLi-on solar mobile power, but Renovagen of the UK has been working hard to adapt the technology to industrial scale applications. Its Rapid Roll Solar PV system consists of flexible solar panels that can be deployed in two minutes to provide 11 kW of electrical energy. Another larger version can be deployed from the shipping container in less than an hour, providing 300kW of electrical energy. The Cardiff Commission of the United Kingdom is currently using this solar panel to conduct tests on Flat Holm Island. This is a small limestone island. There is no permanent resident on the island. Occasionally there are tourists. The island’s infrastructure was previously powered by traditional solar panels, but it is now looking for cleaner, more flexible solutions because it hopes to hope more tourists. Renovagen Managing Director John Hingley said that we are pleased to have completed the deployment of the Rapid Roll solar power generation system on Flat Holm Island and Lamby Way. We have been able to demonstrate the outstanding manoeuvrability and robustness of the Rapid Roll system on Flat Holm Island.