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Published byDonald Gavin Griffith Modified over 9 years ago
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Solar Geysers – a CDM perspective TATA BP Solar case study
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The Facts It is estimated that nearly 5 Lakh homes in Bangalore city alone consume 3 million units of power every day between 6 AM & 9AM for water heating alone. 32.8 Million MW of solar energy strikes Indian landscape every second
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Solar Water Heaters
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Schematic – Two tank system
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The panel
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Performance of SWH Weather and Seasonal Changes in the Sun Path Collector Orientation for optimal performance – year round Maintenance (Scaling, Transparency etc.)
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Solar- Path
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Sectors Industrial Hospitals Domestic Sector Hotels Hostels
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SWH Global Scenario China4,000,000 India2,000,000 Japan1,000,000 Europe890,000 South Korea500,000 Turkey430,000 Israel400,000 USA25,000 In square meters of collectors installed
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Indian Scenario
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GHG emission reduction An effective DSM tool 1000 Domestic water heaters shaves about 1 MW of peak load Most of peak power is fossil fuel based Replaces electrical counterpart (at least partially)
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TATA BP Solar India Limited A case study
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The Company Leading solar equipment manufacturer in India Sales turnover 1900 Million during 2001
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Sales Record
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Solar Geysers In different sizes 100 – 10,000 LPD Applications Bathing Medicinal bathing Boiler feed Process heating Pool heating, washing, cooking
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CDM- Assumptions Solar geysers will replace electrical counterparts Current market growth will sustain for 3 years and later at 10% annum Major policy changes NOT expected (espl. In –ve direction) Reduced selling price on geyser will enhance the market adoption rate KP Ratification & Enforcement
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Additionality Investment Barrier YES Technology Barrier not obvious Prevailing practice YES Market adoption rate YES
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Baseline methodology I.C 12b SSC-PDD Different Baseline & M&V for domestic and Commercial & Industrial systems Domestic Systems To be bundled to reduce m&V costs Weighed average emission of the peak load generation mix (meth to be recommended)
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Baseline methodology contd.. Industrial Systems Displaces Diesel generated electricity than grid electricity – generation mix at the grid level is unfair Commercial Systems Bundling is necessary Current generation mix of the grid
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Monitoring & Verification Recording annually No. of systems Operating Estimating the annual hrs. of operation
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Unresolved Uncertainties of base line Change in usage pattern of hot water Climatic condition (monsoon, depression etc) Solar intensity on ground (reduced 10% in last few decade) Asian brown haze ? Maintenance = Performance Can be substantiated by buffer calculations (meth recommendation ?) Annual targets are difficult to meet
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