• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: The cost and emissions advantages of incorporating anchor loads into solar mini-grids in India
  • Contributor: Beath, Hamish [VerfasserIn]; Hauser, Muriel [VerfasserIn]; Sandwell, Philip [VerfasserIn]; Gambhir, Ajay [VerfasserIn]; Fewa, Sheridan [VerfasserIn]; Chambon, Clementine L. [VerfasserIn]; Nelson, Jenny [VerfasserIn]
  • imprint: 2021
  • Published in: Renewable and sustainable energy transition ; 1(2021) vom: Aug., Artikel-ID 100003, Seite 1-14
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1016/j.rset.2021.100003
  • ISSN: 2667-095X
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Anchor loads ; Solar PV ; Mini-grid ; Rural Electrification ; Energy for Health ; India ; Aufsatz in Zeitschrift
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Renewables-based mini-grids have the potential to improve electricity access with lower emissions and better reliability than national grids. However, these systems have a challenging cost to revenue ratio, hindering their implementation. Combining residential loads with an anchor load, a relatively large non-domestic user, can help to improve mini-grid economics. Using measured electricity demand data from India and energy modelling, we assess the cost and emissions advantages of integrating health clinics as anchor loads within domestic solar mini-grids. For comparison, we also assess the ability of the national grid to meet our demand scenarios using monitored grid data. We apply a scenario-based approach, using separate domestic and anchor load demand profiles, and both in combination; we test meeting two levels of energy demand, 95% and 100%; and compare systems using PV and batteries, diesel, and hybrid generation. We find that the national grid has poor availability, at just over 50% at the most comparable monitoring site; and that it would meet a lower fraction of energy demand for our anchor load scenarios than the domestic only ones. For the off-grid systems, we find substantial cost and emissions reductions with anchor loads relative to demand scenarios without anchor loads. At 95% of demand met, we find PV and battery systems are 14-22% cheaper than diesel-only systems, with 10 times lower carbon intensity. Our findings illustrate the role off-grid systems can play in the provision of reliable low-carbon electricity and highlight the advantages of incorporating anchor loads like health centres into such systems.
  • Access State: Open Access
  • Rights information: Attribution (CC BY)