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Solar, Standards, Sustainability. Photovoltaic Standardization, Certification and Labelling for Thailand 1 December, 2006 Intercontinental Hotel, Bangkok – Thailand Chris Greacen, Ph.D. Palang Thai www.palangthai.org. Outline . Standards Why? Standards need to address real problems
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Solar,Standards,Sustainability Photovoltaic Standardization, Certification and Labelling for Thailand 1 December, 2006 Intercontinental Hotel, Bangkok – Thailand Chris Greacen, Ph.D. Palang Thai www.palangthai.org
Outline • Standards • Why? • Standards need to address real problems • Thai solar home systems – BGET experience in TAK • Overview of Thai SHS program • BGET local technician trainings • Survey and results • Failure modes • Post warranty sustainability?
Standards • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why? • How?
Area of interest Standards Challengeswith solarPV in Thailand
Standards… why? • Quality • Standards are a way to help ensure quality • Equipment • Installations • quality sustainability,safety, environmental performance • quality user satisfaction long term profitability • Seal can communicate quality to consumers • Interoperability • “part A will work with part B"
What standards? … a cautionary note • Standards are important… but can be: • Expensive, bureaucratic, restrictive • Standards need to: • Address real problems in Thai context • Achieve balance between quality & cost
Addressing real problems… • Case study: Thai SHS in Tak Province • User knowledge • O&M • Installation quality • Inverters • Lights • Other case studies that should be considered… • Battery charging stations, PV water pumping, PV satellite phones, PV for rural schools, grid-connect PV, etc.
Case study: Thai SHS in Tak province Rated 150 W, 50 Hz, 230 V Inverter / 10 A Charge controller Rated 120 peak Watt single crystalline PV module AC outlet for TV or other appliances Two 10 W tube fluorescent lights with electronic ballasts 12 V, 125 Ah deep cycle lead-acid battery
Thai Solar Home System (SHS) • 290,716 households without grid connection before SHS • 188,995 SHS in all Thailand • 15,000 SHS in Tak Province • Thai installed PV in 2003: 6 MWp • SHS program adds 23 MWp! • Responsibility of SHS transferred from the Provincial Electricity Authority (PEA) to Tambon (county) governments Tak Source: PEA, May 2006
warranty Existing linkages Tax payers $ Ministry of Interior $ PEA $ Installation company SHS End users
warranty Missing linkages Tax payers $ Ministry of Interior $ PEA $ Installation company SHS End users What happens when systems fail? There is no feedback loop from the end users to installation company, PEA, government or taxpayers
warranty Missing linkages Tax payers Question:Should a Thai PV standard include end-users training? $ Ministry of Interior $ PEA $ Installation company SHS End users Feedback on status of systems, failure modes, successful interventions Warranty awareness Self-help: local technicians + user training
SHS Warranty • Warranty periods • Complete system: 2 years • Solar panel: 5 years • Charge controller/Inverter: 3 years • Battery: 2 years • Light/Ballast: 2 years • Very few villagers informed that there is a warranty Question: Should a Thai PV standard require that end-users are informed about warranty terms and claims procedures?
Border Green Energy Team (BGET) SHS trainings in Tak province • Technician trainings in two districts • 3-day theory & hands-on training • cooperation with Tambons • The technicians • are provided with a tool box • get a SHS manual • http://www.palangthai.org/docs/TechManualThai.pdf • make minor repairs and system improvements • educate homeowners in system use & maintenance • help with repairs after the warranty expires • survey all SHS in their village cluster
BGET SHS trainings in Tak province Districts in Tak province • Mueang Tak • Ban Tak • Sam Ngao • Mae Ramat • Tha Song Yang • Mae Sot • Phop Phra • Umphang • Wang Chao Priority 1: 8,692 SHS Priority 2: 3,834 SHS
BGET SHS trainings in Tak province Trainings already performed in ten Tambons
BGET SHS status survey • BGET Survey based on sample of 405 systems from Tak • House-to-house survey conducted by technicians that passed BGET training course.
BGET SHS status survey:failure modes observed in Tak Sample size: 405 systems in Mae Ramat Amphur & Tha Song Yang Amphur Survey: house-to-house, interviews & measurements, between Dec 2005 and March 2006 All SHS in Tak installed by Solartron. Anecdotal evidence suggests that other provinces/other companies may have higher failure rates.
Observed failure modes - inverter Failed inverter/charge controller (~10% of all systems surveyed).
Inverter/controller failure modes • Manufacturing defect? • FET failures (?) • Suspected causes • harmonics or voltage spikes from fluorescent ballast • Insufficient protection circuitry • Insects ? (Solartron) • User error • Attempted synchronization of 2 inverters • Installation-related • Rain damage Question: How can standards reduce charge controller/inverter failures?
Observed failure modes - ballast Ballast failure ~9% of systems surveyed Question: How can standards reduce fluorescent light failures?
healthy, without sulfation sulfated plates Observed failure modes –battery battery failure in ~6% of systems surveyed Question: How can standards reduce premature battery failure?
Observed failure modes – solar panel Manufacturing defect: Missing connector (Junction Box)(rare: < 1%) Missing Correct
Observed failure modes – solar panel Manufacturing defect: Diode with wrong polarity (rare: < 1%) Correct polarity Incorrect polarity Question: How can standards reduce module failure?
Observed failure modes – solar panel Installation error: Burned Diodes from Panel Reversed Polarity(rare: < 1%)
Installation error PV installation in shady location 14:00 Saw Kre Ka village, Tha Song Yang District
Problems found during training surveys Installation error: Bad panel locations Question: How can standards reduce installation errors?
ISP certified installers (USA) have to know how to use a solar site selection tool like the Solar Pathfinder.
User error: bypassed controller battery overcharge Observed failure modes – (cascading component failure) • Villager bypasses broken controller and charges battery directly from PV • Battery over-charged. Electrolyte level drops and plates are exposed to air. Battery fails. 1 2
Thai SHS program SWOT • Strong features • Relatively big PV module – 120 watts (compared to SHS in other countries) • PV modules & battery work well • Systems are generally installed well • Provide useful services, appreciated • Weak features / challenges • Failure-prone inverter/controller, ballast Insufficient local capacity for O&M, repair • Insufficient user knowledge about system limitations, basic care, warranty • Villages often very remote – hard to get to (especially in rainy season) • Language barriers in remote areas (few speak/read/write Thai) • Opportunities • Installed solar panels represent huge investment (25,000 baht x 200,000) • Relatively small additional investment to make good use • Threats • Widespread SHS failures unless coordinated effort to address sustainability
Summary questions from Tak SHS case • Should a Thai PV standard include: • end-users training? • require that end-users are informed about warranty terms and claims procedures? • How can standards reduce: • charge controller/inverter failures? • fluorescent light failures? • premature battery failure? • module failure? • installation errors?
Can standards help ensure that PV panels produce useful electricity for a long time... ... rather than being used for other purposes?
Chris Greacen chris@palangthai.org www.palangthai.org www.bget.org