Particle.news

Download on the App Store

Vertical Floating Solar Plant Switches On in Bavaria to Power Gravel Works

Built without subsidies, the storm‑ready demonstration array supplies the host site as the developer tests a new approach to siting and output.

Overview

  • Sinn Power commissioned an experimental floating installation in Gilching with 2,600 vertically mounted modules spanning about 13,000 square meters and roughly 1.8 megawatts of capacity.
  • The east–west, vertical design shifts production away from the midday peak and limits water coverage, with four‑meter lanes between rows and reported surface occupation of about 4.65 percent under a 15 percent legal cap.
  • Electricity from the array is intended primarily for the Jais gravel plant, which expects to cut its annual grid consumption by about 70 percent; no storage is installed yet.
  • The system is engineered for severe weather, allowing modules to tip in high winds and right themselves, and the company says the technology now holds maritime certification.
  • Bavarian Minister‑President Markus Söder praised the project at its inauguration, and the firm is exploring broader uses including offshore platforms and recent discussions with the Italian Navy on autonomous applications.