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Technologies that Empower Distributed Generation for Rural Electrification: Options for Myanmar Yangon, Myanmar Dr. Chris Greacen September 5, 2013 Outline • Mini-grids and conventional grid extension – What happens when the grid arrives? • Low cost pre-electrification (solar microgrid) • Lowering distribution cost for low-density rural electrification (SWER) • Technologies to help spread out peak loads on mini-grids (MCBs, Gridshare) 2 Electricity for whom? 3 Extending the grid and rural mini-grids Customers National Grid Large Plants Customers MiniGrid Small Power Producer 4 Electrification: 26% 5 Electrification: 50% 6 Electrification: 75% 7 Rice husk gasifier Myanmar – Kayuklot Township electricity to 500 households What to do when the “big grid” expands to reach the “little grid”? • Option 1: formerly off-grid generators connect to the grid to sell electricity – DC sources (e.g. solar) • Grid-connect inverter required – AC generators (e.g. hydro) • Digital relay required Chris Greacen, Richard Engel, and Thomas Quetchenbach, A Guidebook on Grid Interconnection and Island Operation of MiniGrid Power Systems Up to 200 kW (Schatz Energy Research Center and Palang Thai, LBNL--‐6224E). What to do when the “big grid” expands to reach the “little grid”? • Option 2: purchase electricity from national grid for distribution on mini-grid. – Mini-grid must be built to acceptable standards What to do when the “big grid” expands to reach the “little grid”? • Option 1 + 2: both! •Mae Kam Pong, Chiang Mai, Thailand •Built by government & community •40 kW •Used to be off-grid; •Making arrangements to sell electricity to grid 4 MW hydro - Tanzania electricity to 4000 households in >15 villages & sells to the grid Affordable pre-electrification • Pre-electrification is: – safe lighting – cell phone charging – small appliances • Pre-electrification is generally not: – Agricultural milling – Power tools (electric saws, etc.) – Water pumping 14 Pre-electrification solar micro-grid Devergy in Tanzania www.devergy.com Devergy •Every household that wants electricity gets an electronic pre-paid meter •Electricity paid with cell phone •About $7 per month Devergy pre-electrification technology •Every 5-6 households served by an “Enbox” •60 watts of PV •24 volt, 20 Amp-hr battery •ZigBee wireless electronics, networked to metered households and other Enboxes •The micro-grid sends update on status of all meters, voltage & current of all Enboxes via cell-phone (GPRS) carrier to internet every 5 minutes. Single Wire Earth Return (SWER) • Single wire system using ground as return conductor • It is used for low cost rural electrification Source: Tulloch & Davies, 2006. SWER: New Zealand & Australian Experience. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTENERGY/Resources/336805-1137702984816/21357341142446048455/SWERIan.ppt 18 How it all started • Lloyd Mandeno invented SWER in New Zealand in 1925. • Seen in 1940’s as preferred solution for remote, sparsely populated areas. • 200,000 km of SWER now in NZ and Australia. • Successfully used in NZ, Australia, Canada, India, Brazil, Africa and Asia for sparsely populated areas Source: Tulloch & Davies, 2006. SWER: New Zealand & Australian Experience. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTENERGY/Resources/336805-1137702984816/21357341142446048455/SWERIan.ppt How does it work? Resistance R1 = R (conductor) + R (earth return path) Allow 0.05 ohms/km at 50 Hz for earth return path. Source: Armstrong. Single Wire Earth Return www.ruralpower.org/oldsite/images/rubberdocs/019_SWER.ppt Advantages of SWER • Cost Reduction – – – – One conductor, less pole top equipment Long, hilltop to hilltop spans Fewer switching and protection devices In Australia & NZ: • Capital cost 50% less than 2-wire, single-phase • 70% less than 3-wire, 3 phase • Design Simplicity • Reduced maintenance costs • Estimated 50% maintenance cost saving • Reduced bushfire hazard – avoid conductor clashing 21 Source: Armstrong 2002. Single Wire Earth Return Limitations of SWER • Restricted load capacity • Requirement for reliable low resistance earthing at isolating and distribution transformers • Possible interference with metallic communications systems • Higher losses due to charging currents Source: Tulloch & Davies, 2006. SWER: New Zealand & Australian Experience. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTENERGY/Resources/336805-1137702984816/21357341142446048455/SWERIan.ppt 22 Technologies to help reduce peak loads on micro-hydro mini-grids Voltage drops 23 Miniature Circuit Breakers (MCBs) or PTCs to limit peak loads 600 kWh meter 500 w atts 400 300 200 100 S1 11pm 9pm 7pm 5pm 3pm 1pm 11am 9am 7am 5am 0 Mini-circuit breaker can encourage peak load reduction Mini-circuit breaker CASE STUDY - LOAD MANAGEMENT • A 35 kW micro-hydro plant in Rukubji, Bhutan • Lighting, TVs, rice cookers and water boilers are the common loads Voltage drops As on many mini-grids, when load exceeded generation capacity, brownouts occurred 25 Source: Schatz Energy Research Center GRIDSHARE LOAD MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGY • Humboldt State University team, in partnership with Bhutan Power Corporation and Bhutan DOE developed the GridShare. • The GridShare, installed in each household, limits household load only during a brownout or voltage drop. • The device is intelligent enough to detect rice cookers, and keeps them turned on for people to finish cooking their rice. 26 GRIDSHARE LOAD MANAGEMENT TECHNOLOGY Electrical data indicated a reduction of over 90% in severe brownouts Reduced spoiled rice and Residents stated: “the grid is more predictable” 27 Conclusions Technology Application Impact Interconnection relays mini-grid connect to main-grid Lowers risk to developers of isolated mini-grids Solar pico-grid Affordable preelectrification deliver small amounts of electricity, deploy quickly, inexpensively ZigBee & GPRS internet connecctivity monitoring of remote mini-grids Lowers repair costs by catching problems early on. SWER Low cost grid extension Reduced hardware cost MCBs and GridShare Management of peak loads Fewer brownouts Chris Greacen Palang Thai [email protected] www.palangthai.org