
Jönköping
Jönköping Environmental Services
Sweden's largest floating solar park, live in Jönköping. 48 PowerModules. 21 tonnes of CO₂ avoided a year. 155 m³ of water saved a year.
Sunsurf Solar — installations in operation
Sunsurf Solar has delivered floating and pile-free solar installations across Sweden since 2022 — including Sweden's largest floating solar park (Miljöhantering i Jönköping, 2025) and Sweden's first peat-adapted solar installation at Kättilstorp (2024). Live sites: Tångagård (Falkenberg), Säve Plantskola (Gothenburg), Hyllstofta (Klippan, Nårab), Miljöhantering i Jönköping, Kättilstorp (Falköping) and Sötåsen Naturbruksgymnasium (2022 pilot). Last updated: 24 April 2026.

Selected work
It's interesting to produce renewable energy on a surface that can't produce anything else. I'm fairly tired of solar parks on farmland — but putting them on a surface that can't generate anything else, and that also reduces evaporation, is just great.

Sunsurf Solar keeps pushing the edge of development and innovation. Alongside our work on floating solar, we've built a system that opens up installations on other unused surfaces — peatland, bog and landfill.
One of the technology's biggest advantages is that it works on low-pH sites where conventional methods like pile driving don't fit. That keeps environmental impact low — particularly important on peatland. Peatland is a significant carbon sink, storing large amounts of CO₂ and playing a critical role in the climate.
With our technology, solar can go on peatland with minimal environmental impact. That means contributing to clean energy while protecting vital ecosystems.
We had high expectations that the technology would perform well in these conditions, but it was still terrific to see the results back up the assumptions. Now we look forward to deploying this solution in larger projects, where the land would otherwise sit unused.

Norra Åsbo Renhållnings AB (Nårab) has installed a floating solar park on the leachate pond at Hyllstofta waste facility in Klippan. The investment is part of Nårab's work to make waste management more sustainable and energy-efficient — producing its own clean electricity directly on site.
The installation has 42 PowerModules and 126 bifacial solar panels. The bifacial panels capture both direct sunlight and light reflected from the water below, increasing yield compared with conventional ground- or roof-mounted systems. Siting them on a leachate pond turns an otherwise unused surface into a contribution to the operation's power supply — without affecting land resources or waste-handling logistics.