https://online2.tingclass.net/lesson/shi0529/10000/10183/826.mp3
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In the 1940s, when offshore oil and gas drilling got started in the Gulf of Mexico, offshore platforms were required to have hazard lights to warn ships of their presence. To power the lights, oil companies had to invest in big, expensive, non rechargeable batteries that needed replacing at least once a year. By the early 1970s, when some of the first commercial solar cells were coming on the market, oil companies were ready to give them a try. So instead of large batteries, some oil companies fitted their offshore platforms with smaller, rechargeable batteries powered by solar panels. It worked so well that soon most rigs in the Gulf went solar. Intereting!I suppose solar energy makes a lot of sense any place that’s remote and doesn’t have a ready source of electricity. Right.There’s a lot of interest today in using solar power instead of electricity made by burning coal. But the fact is that for many years solar energy has been used to generate power when other sources aren’t available.