Take A Glimpse Inside Mumbai’s Solar Powered Masjid

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In a great initiative to promote eco-tourism and help in saving the environment, the Noorani Masjid in Pathanwadi, the biggest mosque in Malad is solar powered.

What Is It?

After the success of other mosques in South Mumbai, the chairman of the trust that runs the mosque, Rashim Gulam Rasul Maredia, decided to adopt the similar cost-effective form of electricity generation in the mosque. Reportedly, the electricity bill of the mosque reduced from Rs. 85,000 to Rs. 37,400. The mosque would also save 17.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions by using solar energy.

What’s In It?

The Noorani Masjid at Malad’s Pathanwadi area is the eighth mosque in Mumbai to install the renewable energy sources to power electricity requirements. It is the biggest mosque in Malad and it witnessed a 45% drop in its electricity bill after adopting a rooftop solar system method. The mosque has a centralized Air Conditioning and a capacity to hold over 5,000 devotees, the power usage at the six-story building is high and comes at a hefty price.

Image credits: Hindustan Times

The mosque has a 25 kilowatt-power solar power panel which is made up of 72 solar panels and caters to the consumption of 60-tonne AC units, lights, and fans in all the common areas of the mosque.

During the summer season, the solar system generates 110 units of electricity and 80 units during the monsoon season. While the plant can generate 35,000 units of electricity annually, the mosque’s annual consumption is of 80,000 units. The mosque would save 17.5 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions by using solar energy.

Image credits: Times Now

The private firm that installed the solar power system, plans to come up with a second phase of the project that would ass another 25 kilowatt-power on the rooftop of the mosque. The mosque is expected to reduce 90% of its electricity bill by 2020. The cost of installing the plant was Rs 15.23 lakh which is expected to be recovered in 3 years.

Yashasvi Shaktawat: The curiosity to explore unseen places, meet new people, interact with locals, and unravel every culture is what intrigues Yashasvi the most. She is an adventure junkie who might look timid but, is ready to take on any challenge. She doesn’t believe in having a bucket list and instead, living life as it comes, one day at a time. The centrepiece of her jigsaw puzzle is travelling, writing and collecting as many adventures as she can in her happy jar.