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Techno-economic modelling of micro-hydropower mini-grids in Nepal to improve financial sustainability and enable electric cooking

Clements, William; Pandit, Surendra; Bajracharya, Prashanna; Butchers, Joe; Williamson, Sam; Gautam, Biraj; Harper, Paul

Techno-economic modelling of micro-hydropower mini-grids in Nepal to improve financial sustainability and enable electric cooking Thumbnail


Authors

William Clements

Surendra Pandit

Prashanna Bajracharya

Joe Butchers Joe.Butchers@uwe.ac.uk
Lecturer in Engineering Principles

Sam Williamson

Biraj Gautam

Paul Harper



Abstract

In rural Nepal, micro-hydropower plant mini-grids provide renewable electricity to thou-sands of communities but the plants often have poor financial sustainability. Widespread uptake of electric cooking in such communities is currently not feasible due to high peak loads and limited capacity. In this paper, we develop a Remote-Areas Multi-Energy Systems Load Profiles (RAMP)-based stochastic techno-economic model for evaluating the economic viability of off-grid communities and improving their financial sustainability by introducing new appliances, productive end uses, and demand-side management measures. The model can be used to understand community electricity demand, assess economic status, determine equitable and profitable tariff structures, and plan new connections including electric cooking promotion or new industrial machines. Detailed electric cooking load modelling functionality was developed to represent Nepali cooking practices, scalable to approximate widespread uptake of electric cooking, and adaptable to other cookers and contexts. The model showed that a payment structure based on electricity consumption rather than a flat tariff could increase the income of a case study community in Eastern Nepal by 400%, although increased monthly payments for certain households from NPR 110 (USD 0.93) to NPR 500–1100 (USD 4.22–9.29) could present difficulty. However, households could reduce their electricity consumption and a more equitable tariff structure could be chosen while preserving plant profitability. The number of industrial machines such as mills could be doubled and up to 40 households provided with electric cookers if demand-side management measures were introduced.

Citation

Clements, W., Pandit, S., Bajracharya, P., Butchers, J., Williamson, S., Gautam, B., & Harper, P. (2021). Techno-economic modelling of micro-hydropower mini-grids in Nepal to improve financial sustainability and enable electric cooking. Energies, 14(14), Article 4232. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14144232

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 9, 2021
Online Publication Date Jul 13, 2021
Publication Date Jul 13, 2021
Deposit Date Jun 7, 2023
Publicly Available Date Jun 7, 2023
Journal Energies
Electronic ISSN 1996-1073
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 14
Issue 14
Article Number 4232
Series Title This article belongs to the Special Issue Clean Energy Innovations: Challenges and Strategies for Low and Middle Income Countries
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/en14144232
Keywords Micro-hydropower; mini-grid; Nepal; techno-economic model; electric cooking; demand-side management
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/10844976
Publisher URL https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/14/14/4232

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