Solar-powering Saft’s plant in Poitiers: For Greener Energy

Location: France
Partners: TotalEnergies, Saft
Main activity: distributed solar power generation
Commissioning: 2019

1.4 GWh
of renewable electricity produced on site each year

The project that TotalEnergies started working on in 2018 in Poitiers was aimed at achieving two goals: reducing the Saft industrial plant’s substantial energy bill and at the same time curbing its environmental impact. We installed photovoltaic panels on carport rooftops, which blend into the landscape, to do both. Besides providing shade and protection for Saft employees’ parked cars, TotalEnergies’ solution produces 1.4 GWh of renewable energy directly on site each year.

A solar project mirroring our strategy

TotalEnergies has been active across the solar energy value chain for 40 years, delivering custom solutions ranging from electricity production to sale.

TotalEnergies’ teams worked at our subsidiary Saft’s plant in Poitiers, France. The plant principally produces high-value-added cells and batteries for the electronics, space and defense sectors, and the project’s goal was to reduce its environmental impact and increase its energy efficiency.
Achieving that goal—without disrupting the company’s operations—involved installing 2,730 solar panels on 5,500 sqm of carport rooftops.

The solution has been up and running since January 2019. It produces 1.2 MW of renewable electricity on site each day, and up to 1.4 GWh a year—or enough to power more than 200 homes.

This project to solar-power Saft’s plant is a perfect example of our strategy: it is reducing the customer’s electricity bill and shrinking its environmental footprint. Our teams set up a similar solution at Saft’s plant in Nersac (near Angoulême, also in France).

Cutting-edge photovoltaic technology

TotalEnergies met the Saft industrial plant’s requirements using cutting-edge solar technology based on its proven expertise in renewable energies.
As the car park’s space is limited, the teams chose high-performance Maxeon photovoltaic modules, which deliver 30% more power than average. A weather station was also installed to monitor production according to sunshine.

Lastly, as we intend to meet each of our customers’ specific needs, we set up a transformer to increase power to 20,000 volts.

Read more on TotalEnergies.com