The construction of the first solar road in Orne, France has now begun. French energy minister Ségolène Royal had traveled to Orne in the summer to inaugurate a manufacturing plant that will produce the so-called "Wattway" paving, made from solar PV.

On Monday, Royal made the same trip to inaugurate the construction of the first solar road. The solar road will be approximately 1km long and 2 meters wide, said the French energy ministry in a press release.

Colas, which is the French company behind the Wattway innovation, tweeted that the installation will cover an area of 2,800 m². So, if Colas is right, the size of the road should be either longer or wider of what the ministrys press release stated. Colas has added that the installation will be completed by December 2016.

Upon its completion, the solar road in Orne will be connected to the ENEDIS electricity distribution network and is expected to generate 17,963 kWh of electricity per day, which is enough for the public lighting of a town of 5,000 inhabitants, Royal said at the event.

However, a power generation figure of 17,963 kWh of electricity per day sounds bizarre. The Wattway panel is said to generate 110 watts per m². If this is the case, an area of 2,800 m² (or 2,000 m² according to the ministry) cannot generate 17,963 kWh of electricity per day.

Popular content The energy ministry said, the site will enable firstly the evaluation of construction techniques for solar roads at large scale; and secondly, the assessment of the technology in terms of its behaviour over time under traffic and in terms of energy efficiency. The project is funded by the French energy ministry, while in the summer Royal had also announced the mobilization of 5 million in state funding to support the development of the Wattway photovoltaic panel at the Société Nouvelle Areacem (SNA) factory, which is in the same area. Royal has never hidden her enthusiasm for the Wattway innovation and her visits both in July and this week aim to showcase the governments support for the solar roads concept. She has also publicly spoken of the development of the solar roads as a part of the countrys energy transition to green growth and, at the same time, creating new jobs. This content is protected by copyright and may not be reused. If you want to cooperate with us and would like to reuse some of our content, please contact: editors@pv-magazine.com. Share Ilias Tsagas Greek-born Ilias has written for pv magazine since 2012, reporting on renewable energy news, electricity market developments and energy policy. His geographic area of expertise includes Europe and the MENA region. More articles from Ilias Tsagas Related content Elsewhere on pv magazine...