Vatican wins European solar award

03 Dec 2008

By The Record

The Vatican won the 2008 Euro Solar Prize for turning the football field-sized roof of its Paul VI audience hall into a giant solar-power generator.           

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Sunny day: Solar panels cover the roof of the Vatican’s Paul VI audience hall in this photo released by the Vatican. The hall’s original concrete roof was replaced with panels of photo-electric cells, generating the city’s first solar power. CNS photo/Vatican

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By Carol Glatz
VATICAN CITY (CNS) – A European association promoting renewable energy presented the award to Cardinal Giovanni Lajolo, president of the commission governing Vatican territory, during the inauguration of the new roof on November 26.
Cardinal Lajolo said he would make sure the award, a small silver and glass globe, would go to Pope Benedict XVI, who repeatedly has called on humanity to show greater care for creation.
The association’s president, Hermann Scheer, said he hoped more governments, businesses and individuals would be inspired by the Vatican’s efforts and thereby promote and support renewable energy, too.
A German company, SolarWorld, donated and installed 2,400 solar panels on the top of the Vatican’s audience hall after Vatican officials had made public their plans to convert the rooftop into a solar-power generator.
The gift is estimated to be worth about $1.55 million dollars.
Scheer said the only way to inspire more people to tap into solar power was for a well-respected, “worldwide institution, indeed, the Catholic Church with its global importance,” to set the stage and show it could be done.
He said he hopes the Vatican’s new solar-panel roof, which will produce some 300,000 kilowatt-hours of power each year, will help “overcome the mental block many people have toward new sources of energy.”
The solar panels began generating energy for the Vatican’s power grid on November 26 during the Pope’s weekly general audience.
A large electronic tally board hangs in the hall to keep count of how many kilowatt hours are being produced and how much oil and carbon dioxide is being saved by using solar energy.
After just a few hours on a partly sunny November 26, 60 kilowatt-hours had been generated and 88 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, or CO2, were avoided.
Pier Carlo Cuscianna, director of technical services for Vatican City, told reporters another solar-panel system was being installed above the Vatican’s employee cafeteria to help provide power for heating and cooling the building.
Another project still in the planning stages, he told reporters at the inauguration, is to set up 1.2 acres of solar panels at Vatican Radio’s Santa Maria di Galeria transmission centre in the countryside outside Rome.
He said they already have a list of potential donors for supplying the solar panels for this and other future projects.
The Vatican has said its aim is to use renewable energy sources for 20 percent of its energy needs by 2020, the target date set by the European Union for its members.
- Catholic News Service