Busting
out newest tech to aid
As
A market with stellar prospects
The fast-growing Vietnamese economy is starting to feel
an increasing pressure to secure the necessary energy supplies.
After over-reliance on conventional resources such as
coal, hydropower, and gas to ensure energy security,
Solar energy is gaining momentum due to the falling
costs of solar technology and the global drive to switch to renewable energy.
In fact,
Solar irradiation levels are comparable to most
countries in the region, including developed solar markets like
According to the National Power Development Plan (PDP
7), solar power is expected to become the main form of renewable energy, with
the installed capacity to be increased from around 6-7 megawatts (MW) by the
end of 2017 to 850MW by 2020 and 12,000MW by 2030, equivalent to 1.6 and 3.3
per cent of the country’s total power generation capacity, respectively.
To facilitate this goal, the Vietnamese government has
issued a number of incentives to encourage investment in solar energy.
In April 2017, the government introduced the first
Vietnamese legislation for solar power development (Decision
No.11/2017/QD-TTg), which sets the price for solar electricity at 9.35 US
cents/kWh.
Following the issuance of Decision 11, in September
2017, the Ministry of Industry and Trade officially released Circular
No.16/2017/TT-BCT on project development and a standardised power purchase
agreement (PPA) for solar power projects.
The issuance of the new feed-in tariff and solar PPA
have laid out a conducive legal framework to lure private investment into the
Vietnamese solar energy market.
On the back of supportive regulations, enthusiasm for
solar energy has grown significantly in the past years.
The number of local and foreign companies looking to
develop solar projects in
The next step is to choose suitable technology to turn
this solar dreamscape into a reality.
Leveraging the 1,500-volt system
advantage
The PV inverters that convert the sun’s energy (DC)
into grid power (AC) have been the focus of some of the most radical
innovations of all.
That’s because increasing the voltage will deliver
greater energy output per square metre, in turn ensuring farms require less
infrastructure and land to operate efficiently.
So, inverters that were once typically built to a
1-kilovolt (kV) specification a few years ago are being swiftly superseded by
the 1.5kV standard first launched by GE in 2012.
When coupled with a matching 330Wp PV module, 1.5kV
(1,500v) inverters can help deliver up to 3 per cent and 15 per cent
reductions in system and operational costs, respectively.
Their efficiency and cost advantages are now seeing
GE’s 1,000v roll-out widely replacing “standard” 1kV kits across the world,
and first deployments are live in many Asian countries including
As a result, many solar farm operators are adopting
1,500v to reduce costs and enhance returns on investment.
But just as solar generation hardware advances, so do
the possibilities opened up by the new world of IoT that will see US$50
billion worth of assets connected to the internet by 2020.
Real-time, big data-informed intelligence and analytics
are set to redefine solar performance and productivity expectations by
automating and optimizing predictive maintenance and monitoring across every
item of solar plant hardware.
The outcome is reduced costs and downtime – plus
greater productivity – in an industry where replacing just one faulty part
has previously meant days of disruption and lost output.
The lack of data and smart use of data has historically
translated into lost profit for solar projects – for example: contingency
reserves around 5 per cent of capex, overspend on data-blind
operation-and-maintenance contracts around 8 per cent of revenue, and/or kWh
losses between 1-3 per cent of revenue.
The increased performance, and lower costs offered by
digitalization is changing the game for the solar industry, and further
strengthening its position in the global energy lineup.
As the solar PV market expands exponentially –
alongside the complexities of ever-larger farms and challenges around grid
stability – plant developers, investors, owners, and operators are looking
for ways to minimise risk and deliver the best return.
That’s why the industry is evolving to embrace integrated
systems, an approach central to the way GE interacts with the full width of
the utility-scale solar PV ecosystem.
It means GE is working with customers to bring turn-key
electrical solutions from the Solar Module to the HV substation including PV
modules, inverter, balance of plant, SCADA plant control, grid compliance and
HV substation connections along with working with local companies to deliver
the complete Solar EPC offering in
Opportunities on the horizon
Similar to
GE is helping Dubai Electricity and Water Authority to
build a massive solar power plant in the desert surrounding
The plant, called Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Solar
Park, is a three-stage project. Upon completion in 2030, it will be the
largest such installation in the region, generating up to 5,000MW.
The second stage of the project, which uses GE
technology, is now generating up to 200MW of electricity.
This should be enough to power more than 30,000 homes
and offset 250,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide every year.
However, the ambient temperature in
One of GE’s major advantages in extreme environmental
conditions is GE inverters, which can operate at high temperature with very
high efficiency.
As GE’s 1,500v inverters enable a simplified farm
design and require less plant infrastructure compared to its 1,000v peers, it
will be used in the third phase of the solar park and help produce energy at
2.99 US cent per kWh, which will be the cheapest form of energy in
With reliable solar technology, GE is helping
VIR
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Thứ Hai, 11 tháng 12, 2017
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