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Presentation on Wind based Generation and connectivity to Grid Atul Shah Business Head Suzlon Power Infrastructure (P) Ltd Date: 28 th April 2008. Contents. Why Wind energy ? Key differentiators Current Scenario Why Grid connectivity is becoming important ? What are the issues ?
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Presentation onWind based Generation and connectivity to Grid Atul Shah Business Head Suzlon Power Infrastructure (P) Ltd Date: 28th April 2008
Contents. • Why Wind energy ? • Key differentiators • Current Scenario • Why Grid connectivity is becoming important ? • What are the issues ? • How EWA deals with it ? • What WFD wants ?
Why WIND ENERGY? • High oil prices (beyond $ 100 per barrel)-energy cost is soaring up. Wind energy is any day attractive if oil price is above $ 40 per barrel • Do we believe in Climate change and Global warming ? • Do we accept that there is energy shortage in both average and peak Demand? • Do we believe that conventional fuels will get exhausted some time in future but it will not happen in our life time. So We do not care • Do we respect our law- Electr. Act 2003 in words and spirit ?
Why WIND ENERGY? • Capital costs comparable and reasonably stable. • Lower O & M costs • Gestation period of Approx 6 months • Feeding remote areas and thereby reducing T & D losses to some extent • Carbon credits • Pvt And institutional investors and partnership in creating infrastructure • Employment generation
Key Differentiators • Uncertain nature of the wind sources & hence Infirm source • Sites-Located in difficult terrains - from the coastal plains • to the hilly hinterland and sandy deserts, Far flung from densely populated areas, and far away from Load centers. • All these makes connectivity technically and commercially complex. • Unit size being small, negligible Auxiliary equipments, cooling water requirements and switching in /out in the system does not pose any problem like conventional generating units • Quantum jump in Wind power, demands power evacuation at higher voltage levels • PLF between 25 to 35 % depending on site.
Wind Farms located in remote areas in Maharastra (Load centres)
Wind Farms located in remote areas in GUJARAT LOAD centres
Indian scenario in Wind sector • Wind potential in India- By The CWET /MNRE is Approx. 45,000 MW and by IWTMA is Approx.65,000 MW . • Present installed capacity of wind power- Approximately 8768 MW –expected to go up to 15000 MW in next three years • In Wind generation- Tamil Nadu leads followed by Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, Rajasthan and MadhyaPradesh, in that order
Growth of wind power in India(Source: Global Wind energy Council)
Why Grid connectivity is important • As per IE Act 2003, Clause 86(1)(e) Wind Power to be promoted & regulatory Commissions have appropriately passed orders for the same including terms for PPA & RP Obligations. However, it is not perceived by all stake holders in the same spirit. • Connectivity being considered more critical than power flow. • Commercial issues take precedence over technical matters
Why Wind Farms are significantly important now? • Over the past three years, wind based power addition has been more than 1700 MW per year and with higher anticipated growth this would go to 2500 MW • Present percentage of installed capacity of wind power is approx. 6% • While installation is fast, time taken to lay transmission lines would be the critical path work for connecting the wind power generation to the grid. • Likely addition of further 10,000 MWs in next three years.
Likely effects of Wind Generators on Grid • NO contribution to Short Ckt level of the grid • Do not cause problems of Voltage Regulation • Do not affect Net work stability or create power swing • Do not cause distress to voltage profile of power system-the WTGs trips at 80% grid voltage • When connected / disconnected,- no over / under frequency to the grid, - no Transients in system due to large size of grid.
What are the Issues? (Contd…) • Treating Wind Farm Developer (WFD) as Vendors instead of extended arm of STU to create infrastructure. • Getting private investors to invest of Rs.45 to Rs. 60 lacs per MW approx., which is almost 15 to 20% of Transmission & distribution investments. • Not a part of comprehensive planning process in T & D infrastructure. • No guide lines on technical matters, Different spec.s across utilities, outdated deign philosophies, irrelevant to WF peculiarities and forcing them to be like conventional Units. • Wrong perceptions of costs and making infrastructure expensive, making investment unviable and working against our interests
What Wind energy sector Expects • Revisit specs and guidelines for WFS. The presently defined capacities of conductors at various voltage levels as per CEA Transmission planning criteria correspond to wind velocity of 2 kM per hour and high solar radiation are OK for normal lines but Wind farms generate power only between wind speeds of 14 kM/Hr. to 48kM/Hr. Hence current carrying capacity can be much higher • This occurs during June to December when ambient temp.s are low and even solar radiation is low and further enhancing current capacity • Therefore the loadability of the line connecting wind farms has to be equal to thermal capacity.
What Wind energy sector Expects(contd..) • Since these lines are at the fag end of the system and also short lines, loading beyond SIL, but up to thermal limits should be permitted • Redundancy of transmission lines (N -1) should be based on loss of a line and not loss of a tower and should be left to the developer. • Standardization of specifications of Substation equipments and the auxiliary systems. • Since variable cost of wind energy generation is zero, wind energy to be considered for absorption as a “must run’ station similar to Run of the river Hydel power stations • Amperes and power flow should be the criterion and not connected load due to diversity and non-simultaneous peak
What Wind energy sector Expects(contd..) • Infrastructure should be technically optimum and cost effective. • Interstate power evacuation on pvt lines must be permitted. • Suggest a single window clearance for all issues related to power evacuation instead of Transco, Discom, and nodal agencies. • There is need for uniform policy through out the country in respect of tariff of wind power, its wheeling and banking. • The technical and regulatory framework should be pan-India investor- friendly as windy sites are limited. • Wind energy should be given open access in the same way as for captive power.
What Wind energy sector Expects(contd..) • STUs/ licensee should consider RP obligations as minimum and not maximum. • Since forecasting and scheduling is taking time, hybrid with solar and biomass will be next best option and new guidelines should cover this. • This will eliminate the un schedulable aspect of infirm energy and till such time whole grid has to be considered and not each state like EWEA.
About SUZLON • Manufacturing capacity as of March 2008- 5000 MW, By March 2009 -will be 10,000 MW • Employees more than 15,000 from more than 14 nationalities • Operating in four continents and 17 countries • Holds 4th largest market share in the world • SUZLON executes from concept to commissioning of wind farm power and interconnection to grid • To increase the power availability from wind farms, Suzlon is set to deploy Hybrid generation with Solar / biomass