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Solar Power solution for Home in Pakistan.

ghazi52

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Solar Power solution for Home in Pakistan.

Since solar modules are cheap, the computational production costs for solar electricity are well below the average electricity price paid by private households in Germany. Even without feed-in tariff, therefore, one’s own solar power generation can count, namely by the self-consumption of self-generated solar power. Ultimately, you save costs by buying less electricity from the energy supplier. A mini-system should not only be much cheaper than a “real” solar system on the roof but also save time and annoyance: about assembly, registration with network operators and Federal Network Agency for feed-in compensation and for the replacement of the electricity meter.

kits



For less than 4000 you get “regenerated” electricity meter with Ferraris technology, so the classic wheel.
Companies such as Go Green Solutions, Infinitum Energy, Minijoule and Sun Invention offer kits that essentially consist of the actual photovoltaic (PV) module and a suitable inverter. Depending on the offer, there are also fastening materials and connecting cables. The assembly of the parts, the assembly at the intended location and the electrical connection should take over the buyer or hire a craftsman with it. But here is already the first rabbit in the pepper: Already comparatively small additional costs jeopardize the economy, so the sense of investment. After all, saving only starts when the PV system has generated its acquisition, installation and possibly repair costs. That lasts even in the best case several years. In addition, acquaintance with the amateur connection to the power grid can cause serious technical problems and risks being taken to account for violation of norms and laws. However, a photovoltaic system can hardly be hidden: after all, solar cells must stand in the blazing sun if they are ever to pay for themselves.



First, a look at the functional principle of such a PV system. The actual solar cells, which convert light into direct current, sit in a PV module from mass production – products that are also used in larger systems. This also applies to the inverter, which converts DC into AC and adapts its voltage, frequency and phase exactly to the respective mains voltage. He has to do that safely, very precisely and with high efficiency. Compact “Microinverter” with 240 watts of peak power is available for less than 20000.




A 195 watt module has an area of 1.3 square meters and weighs 15 kilograms.
The sparkling idea of the mini-PV systems is simply to connect standard solar modules via inexpensive microinverters directly to the existing power grid of the house or apartment. In the simplest case, this works via an ordinary earthing contact (Schuko) socket. If the microinverter works without errors, it will not shock the user: it switches off when it is not connected to the 230-volt network, because precise network coupling is exactly its purpose.







The inverter converts the direct current generated by the PV module into alternating current. This model of Enecsys lacks the required NA protection for safe shutdown in the event of power failure or network faults.
The control functions of the inverter ensure that energy flows into the house network as soon as the sun is shining. Ongoing consumers – consumer electronics in standby mode, wireless router, refrigerator, heating control, telephone system and much more – use this energy and the electricity meter runs slower. The amortization calculator on the website of the company Minijoule promises that the set “Minijoule Single” within eight years, its acquisition costs. In practice, this goal should usually be achieved later. Some amortization calculator sets maximum yields and high electricity prices, but neglects costs for shipping and connection.






The inverter hangs on one of the two mounting brackets of the PV module with two screws.
If the solar system fails before it recovers its price, its owner loses. Therefore, the warranty period should be longer than the amortization period. If a repair is necessary, the already mentioned shipping costs can significantly delay the amortization. And if dealers or manufacturers disappear from the market, the guarantee threatens to lose their value. Therefore, it is advisable to buy PV modules and inverters from established companies and not from unknown eBay vendors or even abroad.

In order to assess the amortization period meaningful, you have to include all costs. Already for the shipment of the large and heavy package with a 195 watt panel will be just under 5000 due, which extends the amortization by a full year. In order to recoup the costs for the professional connection by an electrician, a system that is so weak needs several years: a single hour’s work of an electric master costs more than 5000 including GST, plus the craftsman’s material and directions. The effort depends on the situation on the ground, but if you assume, for example, only 20000, then the amortization takes four years longer.


Those who carry out the electrical connection themselves must work very carefully – after all, the wiring has to withstand wind and weather for more than a decade. A loose laid rubber cable will hardly do that. Depending on the installation site, fire and lightning protection must be considered. Anyone who violates regulations risks his insurance cover. This can be extremely expensive, especially in the case of fire.







70 percent of the solar harvest occurs in the months of April to September, in winter the sun is lower.
If the actual yields of the PV system are lower than estimated, the amortization takes longer; that’s why you should monitor the yield with a separate meter. It depends not only on the geographical location, but also on optimal south orientation and slope. There must be no shadow on the panel and the weather must play along: In cloudy conditions, the yield drops to a fraction of the peak value. In the winter months, the sun is so low that only little energy comes in. At night, PV systems have low self-consumption, so they consume even electricity: the inverter continues to monitor the grid and module.

Out of the norm

The Association of Electrical Engineering Electronics Information Technology – in short VDE – warns urgently before the connection of power generators to “final circuits”, so for example via Schuko Steckdose. Accordingly, the risk of fire by overloading of lines and the influence of IN ANY FI-switch (now called RCD) can cause dangerous electric shock.




Plug for 230 Volt voltage with contact protection.

Some providers of mini-PV systems are of the opinion that VDE standards have no legal force and can therefore be disregarded without any consequences. However, § 49 of the Energy Industry Law requires that energy systems comply with “generally accepted rules of technology” and also mentions technical rules of the VDE. According to VDE 0100-551, feeding into final circuits is not permitted. A safe but expensive solution would be a separately secured line from the power distribution to a socket for connectors with contact protection, such as the Wieland type RST20i3.





AEconversion also supplies the micro inverter type INV350-60 with integrated NA protection.
But PV systems that feed electricity into the home network must comply with other standards in this country. In 2011, VDE-AR-N-4105 was published for power generators on the low-voltage grid. It also sets minimum requirements for small systems. The most important is a so-called network and system protection (NA protection): In the event of overvoltage or undervoltage, power failure or abnormal network conditions, the power generator must shut down, reliably, quickly and “failsafe”, even in the event of partial malfunction of the protective device. Nevertheless, some manufacturers supply mini-PV systems with cheaper inverters without VDE-compliant NA protection. For some vendors, you can order inverters like AEconversion’s INV-350-60 with “integrated NA protection” – for a surcharge of 50 to 100 Dollars, which in turn extends the amortization period by one to two years. Even externally, the NA protection can be retrofitted as a “central NA protection”, which already costs 300 to 500 Dollars without installation.


Tacho manipulation




The solar power fluctuates drastically during the day, here the yield of a plant with 540 Wp from 15 June.
Many providers of mini PV systems advertise with concrete percentages of annual consumption, which can allegedly be saved thanks to solar power. However, in practice, both the power consumption of the devices connected in the household and the production of the solar cells fluctuate constantly and independently of each other. Without continuous measurement of the consumption at the house connection and the feed of the inverter, no precise statements are possible.

For a family of four, consuming 3800 kWh per year, the arithmetic mean is 434 watts of continuous power consumption – after all, one year has 8760 hours. On a sunny noon in midsummer, when the family is lounging at the Baggersee, the current demand can drop well below 200 watts – ie less than the PV module is currently generating. The excess power then flows into the public grid. If the existing electricity meter has no backstop, it now counts backwards. If this is discovered by the measuring point operator, there is a threat of extensive criminal charges for fraud, forgery of technical records and tax evasion or tax reduction. Still, there are probably no concrete court judgments





Electricity meters with backstop (left) or with separate counters per direction (right) carry special symbols.
The cheapest protection against annoyance is in an electricity meter with backstop; equipped with a unique symbol. Then unfold kilowatt hours but no more savings. If the overproduction occurs frequently, the time to the amortization of the PV system is extended. If there is no backflow inhibited counter, it can be installed by the measuring point operator for a fee. However, the company may then ask for the purpose of meter replacement or press for compliance with TAB. In the course of the market liberalization, the grid operator became “responsible” for the operation of the meter and not the energy supplier; the two roles must not be in the hands of a company.

Reverse running of the meter could also be prevented by an electronic control which reduces the inverter’s production at low load. But an inverter with control input would be necessary, a control box and an electronically readable energy meter or a power meter. The company AEconversion wants to bring such a system on the market, but does not yet call a price.

The Federal Network Agency has come to the conclusion that non-return counters are insufficient. These “lead to infeeds that are not recorded by measurement, without these being assigned to a specific balancing group”, as network gatekeepers have to consider at the request of c’t. A permissible solution would be a counter with two counters , which separately capture feed-in and power consumption. Although such a bidirectional meter causes additional running costs for rent and meter reading, it also brings advantages to the plant operator: Even mini-PV systems are entitled to feed-in tariffs under the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG). Because of the low feed amounts but this will probably cover the maximum cost of measurement and also you have the paperwork on the leg, which should actually avoid the mini-systems.

A battery buffer could prevent the electricity meter from running backwards and increase self-consumption: If the sun supplies too much electricity, it first flows into the storage tank and only later into the grid. However, systems such as Bosch BPT-S5 or Nedap Powerrouter cost several thousand Dollars and require maintenance because the batteries wear out. Cheaper systems are currently ineffective and have short warranty periods, which is why their impact on the efficiency of mini-PV systems can not be reliably assessed.

Tried out

With a 195-Wp set from the company Minijoule (Minijoule Single), we have put the sample to the test and put it into operation on May 12 in Hanover on a south-facing balcony. By mid-August, it harvested about 40 kilowatt hours (kWh). Calculating 26.5 cents / kWh, that’s 10.60 Dollars in three sunny months – much less than previously estimated. It is probably due to a tree that casts shadows on the solar cells in the morning.

But mounting and connection of the PV system is also fraught with pitfalls. Although the wiring of the module and inverter was just as easy as the screw connection with the included mounting brackets. However, for the system to work reliably for 10 to 20 years, it must be carefully and thoughtfully applied. The 1.3 square meter module weighs over 15 kilograms and causes high wind loads during storms. If it crashes, deadly accidents and expensive damage, such as parked cars, are in danger. As surprisingly difficult in the test household, the introduction of the cable into the house, because there was no connection on the balcony. A hole through the wood-aluminum frame of expensive insulating glass windows was out of the question, even the house wall had been isolated consuming only a few years earlier. Finally, a cable was thrown down the house wall to a basement window; This ugly botch solution should only work for a few years, but it was only about a test.

Unlike some competitors, Minijoule supplies connection cables without schuko plugs, ie with stripped wires; This should make it clear to the buyer that he himself bears responsibility for the connection. Before plugging in, we checked whether the used line in the house was separately fused, so no other consumers or sockets on the same “fuse” (the circuit breaker) hung in the distribution box. This test should hardly be able to carry out technical laymen themselves. Background knowledge is also needed to answer further questions, such as whether the existing meter has a backstop or whether household consumption is so cheap that the solar system actually carries some of it in the sunshine. However, the energy generated can be measured inexpensively, for example with an outdated AC meter,

Risk Management

The amortization of small PV systems succeeds only under ideal conditions within acceptable deadlines: You need an optimal location and the necessary knowledge to perform professional installation, monitoring and repair yourself. If you have to pay except for shipping and NA protection also for meter replacement and installation, then the saving begins but only after the expiration of the warranty period – if no breakdown occurs.

The operation of a PV system is always a bet on the future. Shadows, bad alignment or unrecognized defects lower the yield. Professional installation, maintenance and long warranty periods increase the chances of success. Against hail, lightning or theft, only a professionally installed system can be insured. On a secretly operated mini-plant, the relevant standards violated, however, threaten additional risks. If you let the electricity meter run backwards, you are even threatened with serious mail from the prosecutor.

The legally correct connection with NA protection via a bidirectional meter can only be profitable if the feed-in tariff is added to the already mentioned ideal conditions. But for a weak mini-system, this effort is hardly worthwhile; It saves you on a larger system that can be installed by a specialist. If you take a look at photovoltaics to reduce your high electricity bill, you should first take another tip: it is often cheaper to cut power consumption by using more efficient equipment or consistently switching off.
 
Great video.
 
Lovely share @ghazi52

There are parts of Pakistan that get 300+ days of sun and Pakistan is sitting on a gold mine of solar power. If the government incentivized solar power we can easily produce about 50GW from it.


Instead government after government has just focused on thermals for energy generation.
 
Lovely share @ghazi52

There are parts of Pakistan that get 300+ days of sun and Pakistan is sitting on a gold mine of solar power. If the government incentivized solar power we can easily produce about 50GW from it.


Instead government after government has just focused on thermals for energy generation.
I bet you didn't know certain solar panels can collect water vapor? About 5 liters a day for some.
 
Lovely share @ghazi52
There are parts of Pakistan that get 300+ days of sun and Pakistan is sitting on a gold mine of solar power. If the government incentivized solar power we can easily produce about 50 GW from it.
Instead government after government has just focused on thermals for energy generation.


True.
Although this gentleman installed solar panels in AJK , still he is getting perfect power. Great efforts.
 
5 kw Solar Power System for home in Pakistan Price 2019

 
Lovely share @ghazi52

There are parts of Pakistan that get 300+ days of sun and Pakistan is sitting on a gold mine of solar power. If the government incentivized solar power we can easily produce about 50GW from it.


Instead government after government has just focused on thermals for energy generation.

be quiet or govt will put tax on solar generated electricity too
 
Pakistan’s largest solar wall, which has been in talks since the time it was made at University of Engineering and Technology Lahore’s Kala Shah Kako campus, was inaugurated by Provincial Minister for Energy Dr. Muhammad Akhtar Malik on 2nd May 2019. The wall has been built at UET’s Centre for Energy Research and Development (CERAD). The inauguration ceremony was held in presence of Vice Chancellor UET Lahore Prof. Dr. Aziz Akbar, Director CERAD and KICS UET Lahore Prof. Dr. Waqar Mahmood, other faculty members, university’ officials, people from other walks of life and abundant of students.

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The much-talked about solar wall has been the central attention and focus of all and sundry since its capacity of generating mammoth kilowatts is what drags the masses and everyone off their feet. This solar wall will generate 410 kilowatt energy
 
Making the most of sunshine

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Imagine taking a financial position where you have to bet on the rupee devaluing against the dollar, increasing oil prices and inefficiency of the government. This is precisely the position a solar rooftop customer in Pakistan finds himself taking these days.

Consider the loaded grid tariffs (including taxes, surcharges, fuel price adjustment) of a residential connection in the Lahore Electric Supply Company (Lesco) system. The loaded peak tariff went from Rs24.51 per unit in July 2018 to Rs31.09 per unit in March 2019, depicting a 27 per cent increase over eight months.

Moreover, this increase was about 130pc when compared to the loaded peak tariff in March 2018. Much of this increase has been on account of fuel price adjustment (a function of dollar rate, imported oil price and energy mix) but also because effective 1st January 2019, the base tariff was revised upwards by around 50pc.

Coming summers, with further currency devaluation and higher imported-fuel based power generation expected, the tariffs will rise further.

And yet all of this actually helps a solar customer because he remains immune to such tariff escalation. Moreover, thanks to net or reverse metering (where he can sell excess electricity back to the grid) he can actually earn from such inflation in grid tariffs. This disruption is here courtesy solar technology.

Solar technology, much like perhaps all the technologies, has gone through rapid and exponential changes. The price of a solar photovoltaic (PV) panel has gone down from $76.7 per watt in 1977 to about $0.20 per watt today.

This is a phenomenon explained by Swanson’s Law that states that price of solar PV cells tends to drop 20pc with every doubling of cumulative shipped volumes. This learning curve of solar manufacturing has only made solar PVs more affordable.

As opposed to grid-scale solar plants, rooftop solar systems save approximately 15-20pc in transmission/distribution losses

Pakistan is blessed with high solar irradiance (solar power per unit of area) and ample rooftop space. Solar rooftop customers here today enjoy a much better payback on their investment than they did a few years back.

Between 2014 and 2018, the fall in present value prices in dollar terms was considerably higher than rupee devaluation against the importing currency. These factors, coupled with galloping tariff rates, can make an investment in rooftop solar payback within 5years.

That being said, solar energy, much like all renewables, is inherently intermittent. You just can’t have solar power at night. This intermittence makes it both expensive and unreliable for grids’ base loads.

In case of solar, this causes another problem to grid managers called the Duck Curve. Duck Curve is the graphical representation of power production over the course of a day that shows the timing mismatch of consumption and solar power generation.

Typically for grids, power consumption increases early morning for a brief period, experiences a trough during day time then peaks again in evening hours before going down during night.

Now with solar power in the mix, the solar production peaks mid-day which makes the day time trough of grid load more pronounced leaving grid managers with excess power supply in day time and a deficit (requiring expensive peaker thermal plants to operate) in the evening.

The most effective solution to this generation-consumption mismatch lies in energy storage. An efficient, reliable and cheap energy storage system remains elusive and forms the weakest link in the whole solar chain.

This, however, changed recently. In March 2017, the island of Kauai in Hawaii got a 52MWh battery storage solution from Tesla installed at its existing 13mega watt peak (MWp) solar farm. Serving about 30,000 customers on this remote island, the batteries will be replacing diesel-fired generators during night time that would reduce the use of fossil fuels by 1.6 million gallons per annum. And all of this at a unit cost one-third of diesel-powered electricity.

Tesla used the lithium-ion battery technology for this solution. The lithium-ion (li-ion) technology not only boasts grid-scale application but has also brought in residential/commercial consumption to its fold.

The manufacturing of lithium-ion batteries has seen explosive growth since 2010. Driven earlier by consumer electronics (smartphones, laptops, tablets etc), the automotive sector (electric vehicles) is now the dominant user of li-ion based energy storage technologies.
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Similarly, given its distinct advantages over traditional batteries, li-ion has become the battery technology of choice in stationary storage solutions (like PV and grid storage) as well. Compared to conventional lead-acid batteries, the lithium-ion batteries have up to 80pc higher usable capacity, up to 70pc better efficiency (lower energy losses), 2-4 times higher energy density (energy stored per kilogram), and 4-5 times longer cycle life.

Lastly, thanks to large manufacturing capacities, the battery cell prices have seen a steep decline — 19pc per annum between 2010 and 2016 – making them reasonably affordable. Therefore, for solar PV systems requiring storage at home or in offices, li-ion batteries have become really a no brainer.

The suitability of distributed solar for Pakistan’s energy mix is hard to overstate. Solar power is good for lungs, it causes our carbon footprint to shrink, offsets our future import of fossil fuels, conserves valuable foreign exchange and has the lowest dollar cost per unit of energy today.

Moreover, as opposed to grid-scale solar PV plants, roof-top solar systems generate power where it is consumed, saving approximately 15-20pc in transmission/distribution losses. And they require no sovereign guarantees from the government either.

And yet, despite all the good intentions and efforts by the government, as evident by various incentives offered for solar adoption, the offtake has been quite slow.

Major reasons for these include a general aversion of our people to adopt new technology, bad experience with cheaper/poor quality systems offered by unreliable vendors and, most importantly, lack of financing options for solar customers to make the high upfront investment.

Therefore, in order to truly harness solar potential on rooftops, government will have to push banks for solar consumer financing and streamline existing power distribution infrastructure. Until that happens, only a fortunate few will stand to benefit from this technological disruption called rooftop solar.

The writer heads the business advisory function at a large industrial and services group in Islamabad

Published in Dawn, The Business and Finance Weekly, May 6th, 2019
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ISLAMABAD: A couple of weeks ago, we discussed in this space, the issue of spot vs long-term liquefied natural gas (LNG) contracts. In the following, we will highlight the emerging international LNG market.

Global LNG trade grew 6.4% in 2018 value at $150 billion. The market is getting competitive. There are already 20 countries supplying LNG which included Qatar, Australia, Malaysia, Russia, the US, Nigeria, Indonesia, Algeria, Egypt, and others.

A lot of capital expenditure is coming. Saudi Arabia is a new entrant while Oman and the UAE are already in the market, apart from Qatar. LNG prices have shown some volatility in recent years – these were at $15-20 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) in 2014, came down to $5 in 2017, rose to $10 in 2018 and are now trading around $5, both in Asia as well as Europe. The normal ratio between LNG and crude oil prices has traditionally been 80% and predictions are being made that the ratio may go down to 50% due to an LNG supply glut.
It appears that term contracts are risky although spot purchases have non-price risks. According to the IGU Report, out of global LNG trade of 316 million tons per annum (MTPA) in 2018, only 99 MTPA was contracted as non-term (32% of the total).

LNG suppliers prefer to have long-term oil-indexed contracts of 20-25 years, seeking price stability and visibility to ensure required investments. However, LNG spots are better indicators of supply and demand and this trend has been growing constantly.

Gas-linked contracts are originating from the US where LNG contracts are linked with the Henry Hub Index (HHI). Normal terms are 1.15 times of Henry Hub price plus liquefaction and transportation costs.

India’s 60% of supplies are coming under oil-linked contracts and 40% is based on gas-linked contracts, the latter coming mainly from the US. As China has superseded Japan as the largest LNG importer, Australia has superseded Qatar as the largest LNG exporter. It is being predicted that in a few years the US would become the largest LNG exporter due to being the lowest cost producer because of its cheapest shale resources.

Australia has been offering more flexible contracts while Qatar has stuck to the earlier day’s restrictive practices such as destination restrictions. Qatar Gas companies are reportedly under investigation by European regulators for their restrictive practices contrary to the cardinal principles of open competition.

Pakistan

Pakistan has three-term contracts with Rasgas of Qatar, Gunvor of Switzerland and Eni of Italy. The contract with Rasgas was a negotiated contract which sparked a lot of controversies. The government of the time claimed that its Qatar contract terms and prices were compatible with Qatar contracts with India and Bangladesh, which was demonstrably correct.

Later, two other LNG contracts were signed with Eni and Gunvor as a result of open bidding at quite reduced prices of 12.29% and 11.6427% of Brent crude (of the average of last three months) respectively.

These low prices caused further controversy. LNG was also procured in spot markets with a slope varying between 9.2% and 16%. At current crude oil prices of $70 per barrel, Pakistan-Qatar term contract prices at the 13.37% slope would come out to be $9.35, Eni at $8.82 (12.3%) and Gunvor at $8 (11.6427%). However, spot prices rise in winter, but these are not expected to rise by 100%.

Most countries renegotiated LNG term contracts in 2015 and it appears that another round of renegotiations is around the corner. The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) government has requested, if not demanded, price revision from Qatar in the wake of much lower market prices offered and contracted for with Eni and Gunvor.

According to the contract terms with Qatar, price openers can be done after 10 years. Pakistan wants it after five years, if not an outright revision shortly. However, increased supplies of 200 mmcfd have been agreed to recently by Qatar at 20% lesser prices along with some better credit terms.
 
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