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Smart City: turning traffic into clean energy

Turning traffic into clean energy: How this startup plans to power the streets of Istanbul

The breeze produced from passing cars might not seem like much, but ENLIL’s long, unobtrusive, upright blades are powerful enough to produce one kilowatt of energy an hour.

A single turbine fitted with an additional solar panel on top can seamlessly produce enough electricity to power two Turkish households for a day.

Modern, well-designed standard wind turbines have a life expectancy of 20 years, something ENLIL could one day exceed due to its simplicity and durability. Each turbine follows a simple design, making it easy to assemble and also to fix.

The apparatus is small enough to be placed next to moving vehicles without disruption and takes up minimal surface area no matter where it is. This allows for easy transportation and assembly in areas where traditional wind turbines may not otherwise be practical, such as city streets and buildings.

But ENLIL’s environmental benefits extend further. The turbines also harness a number of smart technologies that track the temperature, humidity, carbon footprint and earthquake activity of the surrounding area with IoT systems.

Each measurement provides valuable information that is passed on to authorities and environmental scientists in Istanbul.

A growing appetite for wind power in Turkey

Wind energy consumption hit record highs in Turkey last year and there is a burgeoning appetite for clean innovation. As of 2020, over 8 per cent of the country’s entire energy network is produced by wind power.

Turkey’s future capacity for energy production could take many forms. There are plans to collaborate on an offshore wind farm with Denmark, an €85.2 million mega-investment from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, and continuous schemes to expand green energy manufacturing on Turkish soil.

Though ENLIL may still be in its nascent stages, the project was given the ‘ClimateLaunchpad Urban Transitions Award’, and won the Mercedes-Benz Turkish StartUP Competition before it had even exited its research and development phase.

A successful rollout of the device across the Turkish capital could see other cities across Europe adopt similar initiatives.