Household Solar Photovoltaics: Supplier of Marginal Abatement, or Primary Source of Low-Emission Power?
Abstract
:Abbreviations
AUD | Australian dollar |
g CO2-e | grams of carbon dioxide-equivalent |
GJ | energy, 109 joules |
GW | power, 109 watts (joules per second) |
GWh | energy, 109 watt-hours |
kVA | apparent power, 103 volt-amperes |
kW | power, 103 watts |
kWh | energy, 103 watt-hours equal to 3.6 megajoules |
MW | power, 106 watts |
MWh | energy, 106 watt-hours |
PJ | energy, 1015 joules |
TWh | energy, 1012 watt-hours |
USD | US dollar |
Wh | watt-hour, unit of energy equal to 3,600 joules |
1. Introduction
2. Household Reliance on a “Less than Green” Electricity Grid
2.1. Solar Energy Available
2.2. Modeled Household Demand and Solar PV
2.3. Temporal Profile of Available Solar Energy
Solar capacity (kW) | Proportion of annual energy consumption that is imported from the grid (%) | Proportion of annual hours that power is being imported (%) |
---|---|---|
0.0 | 100 | 100 |
1.0 | 79 | 92 |
2.0 | 70 | 80 |
4.4 | 63 | 70 |
8.8 | 58 | 63 |
2.4. Quantity of Household PV Practically Available in Victoria
2.5. Contribution to System Energy with Increased System Flexibility
3. Network Support with PV
3.1. Reliance on the Distribution Network
Peak gross demand | Peak net demand [north/west] | Relative reduction (%) [north/west] | |
---|---|---|---|
11 Jan | 9858 | 9168/8948 | 35/45 |
8 Feb | 9465 | 8596/8281 | 43/59 |
9 Feb | 9463 | 9025/9025 | 22/22 |
12 Jan | 9301 | 7607/7784 | 85/76 |
10 Feb | 9100 | 9051/9051 | 2/2 |
2 Feb | 8966 | 8356/8300 | 31/33 |
3 Feb | 8920 | 8671/8671 | 12/12 |
11 Feb | 8604 | 8457/8457 | 7/7 |
26 Feb | 8405 | 7934/7909 | 24/25 |
19 Feb | 8236 | 7605/7505 | 32/37 |
3.2. Battery Storage to Improve PV Capacity Credit
- (1)
- The orange curve is the actual Victorian demand for the day, with daily peak P1.
- (2)
- The red curve describes the net Victorian demand with 2,000 MW of Melbourne-based solar without storage, with resulting daily peak P2.
- (3)
- The green curve/line describes the net Victorian demand with solar, and with storage assuming the storage is operated with perfect hindsight, with resulting daily peak P3.
- (1)
- All of the solar is diverted to storage until 10:00 in the morning.
- (2)
- From 10:00 until 13:30, an increasing proportion of solar is fed directly into the grid with a decreasing proportion diverted to storage.
- (3)
- From 13:30 in the early afternoon to 19:00 in the early evening, all of the solar is delivered directly to the grid, with support from the battery storage.
- (4)
- From 19:00 to 22:00, there is no solar generation, but the battery continues to discharge.
3.3. Household PV with Storage to Improve Network Utilization
3.4. Vehicle to Grid Storage (V2G)
3.5. Network Support Summary
4. Assessing the Value of PV for Greenhouse Abatement
4.1. Review of Australian Abatement Cost Estimates
4.2. Abatement Cost Calculation Methodology
4.3. Assumed Life of PV System
4.4. Loss of Abatement through Cycling and Sub-Optimal Operation of Thermal Generators
4.5. Abatement Cost Estimate
4.6. PV in Relation to Other Abatement Opportunities
5. Practical Constraints on Grid Integration
5.1. Redefining Baseload
5.2. Reduced Load Factor of Electricity Systems with PV
NEM | Elliston et al. | |
---|---|---|
Capacity without reserve [GW] | 84.5 | |
Reserve margin @ 20% [GW] | 16.9 | |
Capacity including reserve [GW] | 43 | 101.4 |
Peak demand [GW] | 33.6 | 33.6 |
Annual generation [TWh] | 204.4 | 204.4 |
Calculated load factor [%] | 54 | 23 |
5.3. Comparison of Reliability Measures for Conventional Versus PV
5.4. Comparison of Cost for Conventional Versus PV
5.5. Synchronous Generation, Inertia, and Grid Stability
5.6. Voltage Regulation
- (1)
- Converting households to a three-phase connection with the associated wiring, metering and switchgear, and installing a three-phase inverter. A typical home will cost $500 to $1,000 to upgrade to three phase plus additional inverter costs.
- (2)
- The replacement of OLTC transformers with automatic tap-changing transformers, which require control systems and voltage monitoring within the network to alter the voltage in near real-time in response to prevailing load and supply voltage [101]. At, say $120 to $200 per kVA, the per-household cost of a transformer will be of the order of $500 to $1,000 plus control and monitoring cost.
- (3)
- The commissioning of “smart grid” components to permit active control of solar inverters, storage devices, and loads in response to network operator directives [102].
- (4)
- The use of bi-directional (four-quadrant) inverters to dynamically provide reactive power support and voltage regulation on feeders with high reactance (typically rural feeders) [103].
- (5)
- Augmenting customer service and feeder mains to reduce the impedance seen by solar inverters.
5.7. Solar Ramp Rate Driving a Need for Flexible Generation
6. High Penetration PV Forcing a Sub-Optimal Generation Mix
6.1. Risks and Uncertainties of Future Energy Technologies and Carbon Policies
6.2. Intermittent Generation Forcing a Sub-Optimal Generation Mix
6.3. Low-Emission Baseload Undermined by Intermittent Generation
6.4. Solar PV Competing with Concentrated Solar Thermal and Wind
7. Embodied Energy
7.1. Embodied Energy of PV Systems
7.2. Recent LCA Review
Mono-c Si (rooftop) | Ribbon Si (rooftop) | |
---|---|---|
Insolation [kWh/(m2 yr)] | 1,700 | 1,700 |
Performance ratio | 0.75 | 0.75 |
Module efficiency | 14% | 13% |
Eout,yr [kWhel/(m2 yr)] | 179 | 166 |
T [yr] | 30 | 30 |
Eout [kWhel/(m2)] | 5,355 | 4,973 |
Epp [MJPE/m2] | 3,257 | 1,907 |
Epp [kWhPE/m2] | 905 | 530 |
Solar EROIel = Eout/Epp (refer [122]) | 5.9 | 9.4 |
7.3. Primary Energy Equivalent
7.4. Reduction of EROI Due to Storage or Energy Spilling at High Penetration
Mono-c Si (rooftop) | Ribbon Si (rooftop) | |
---|---|---|
Assumed power of solar [kwmax/m2] | 0.14 | 0.13 |
Assumed battery depth-of-discharge [%] | 50 | 50 |
Hours of capacity at full power [hours] (refer [34]) | 4 | 4 |
Storage capacity [Wh] | 1120 | 1040 |
Sets of batteries over 30 years @ 7.5 yr life | 4 | 4 |
Lead-acid (recycled) embodied energy [MJ/Wh] (refer pg. 21 [127]) | 0.87 | 0.87 |
Ebatt [MJ/m2] | 3898 | 3619 |
Ebatt [kWh/m2] | 1108 | 1005 |
7.5. Embodied Energy with an Off-Grid System
Daily energy used [kWh] | 15.5 |
---|---|
Solar capacity [kW] | 11.1 |
Battery capacity [kWh] | 63 |
Ebatt [MJ] @ 4 sets over 30 yrs | 219,240 |
Solar area [m2] | 79 |
Epp [MJPE/m2] | 3,257 |
Esolar = solar area x Epp [MJ] | 258,234 |
Esystem = Epp + Ebatt | 477,474 |
Eused @ 15.5 kWh/day over 30 yrs [MJ] | 611,010 |
System EROIel = Eused/(Esolar + Ebatt) | 1.3 |
7.6. Embodied Energy of the Distribution Network and Retailing
Industry value added (%) | Employment (%) | Net capital expenditure (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Generation | 35 | 22 | 30 |
Transmission | 11 | 6 | 18 |
Distribution | 47 | 62 | 48 |
On selling and market operation | 7 | 11 | 4 |
100 | 100 | 100 |
7.7. Employment in Australian PV-Related Industries
7.8. Extended EROI
Mono-c Si (rooftop) | Ribbon Si (rooftop) | |
---|---|---|
Basic EROIel = Eout/Epp (Table 4) | 5.9 | 9.4 |
Eout [kWhel/(m2)] (Table 4) | 5355 | 4973 |
Epp [kWh/m2] (Table 4) | 905 | 530 |
Ebatt [kWh/m2] (for 4 hours, Table 5) | 1108 | 1005 |
Ebatt_loss = 5% x Eout [kWh/m2] (Section 7.4) | 268 | 249 |
Edist = 4% x Eout [kWh/m2] (Section 7.6) | 214 | 199 |
Elabor = [kWh/m2] (Section 7.7) | 155 | 144 |
Extended EROIel = Eout/(Epp + Ebatt + Ebatt_loss + Edist + Elabor) | 2.0 | 2.3 |
Extended energy payback time = life / EROI [yrs] | 15 | 13 |
8. Conclusions
Conflict of Interest
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Palmer, G. Household Solar Photovoltaics: Supplier of Marginal Abatement, or Primary Source of Low-Emission Power? Sustainability 2013, 5, 1406-1442. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5041406
Palmer G. Household Solar Photovoltaics: Supplier of Marginal Abatement, or Primary Source of Low-Emission Power? Sustainability. 2013; 5(4):1406-1442. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5041406
Chicago/Turabian StylePalmer, Graham. 2013. "Household Solar Photovoltaics: Supplier of Marginal Abatement, or Primary Source of Low-Emission Power?" Sustainability 5, no. 4: 1406-1442. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5041406
APA StylePalmer, G. (2013). Household Solar Photovoltaics: Supplier of Marginal Abatement, or Primary Source of Low-Emission Power? Sustainability, 5(4), 1406-1442. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5041406