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Floating PV in the Balearics: A Niche Toy or a Grid Savior?

Workers installing floating solar panels on a reservoir in Mallorca under the Balearic sun.
Floating PV in Inca: A niche solution for land-constrained markets.
En Baleares están previstas las instalaciones fotovoltaicas flotantes de Artà (2,8 MW), Ciutadella (0,5 MW), Santa Eulàlia des Riu (0,5 MW), a las que se suman las ya existente de Inca (1,4 MW) y Capdepera (2,2 MW).

The Floating Fallacy

Let's be real: 1.4 MW floating PV in Inca isn't moving the needle on European energy prices. It's a boutique project, likely driven by the extreme land scarcity in the Balearic Islands where finding a brownfield site without a three-year environmental battle is impossible. For the average EPC in Germany or the Netherlands, this is just a 'cool project' photo for the brochure.

Why the Math is Messy

If you're bidding on these floating tenders, you aren't just an installer; you're a marine engineer. The O&M costs for floating arrays are significantly higher than roof-mounts. You're dealing with:

  • Corrosion: Salt air in Mallorca is brutal. If you aren't using C5-rated mounting hardware, your ROI is toast within 60 months.
  • Anchoring Logistics: The cost of securing these rafts against shifting water levels—even in reservoirs—eats your installation margins fast.
  • Cable Fatigue: Constant movement means standard PV cabling will fail. If you aren't spec'ing specialized, flexible underwater-rated cabling, you’re just creating a warranty disaster for your future self.

The Balearic government is pushing these because they have no space, not because they are cost-effective. While companies like Isigenere are doing great work standardizing these systems, for most of you, this is a distraction. Unless you have deep expertise in aquatic logistics, keep your crews on the rooftops. The 'floating' premium is usually just a fancy way of saying 'higher overhead for the same kWh yield'. Stick to the C&I sector where you can control the environment, or you’ll be the one paying for the boat ride to replace a fried string inverter in the middle of a lake.

Why it matters: Floating PV is a specialized high-overhead game; unless you have marine engineering expertise, don't let the 'innovation' label fool you into losing margin.
📰 Read original article at PV Magazine Espana →