Economic Feasibility of Agrivoltaic Systems in Food-Energy Nexus Context: Modelling and a Case Study in Niger
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Frame
2.1. Agrivoltaic (APV) Systems
2.2. Niger—Country Profile
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Data Collection
3.2. Crop Yield and Energy Production Combined
3.3. Indicators for Farming Side
3.3.1. Gross Margin
3.3.2. Farm Profit
3.3.3. Benefit-Cost Ratio (B/C Ratio)
3.4. Economic Indicators for APV Side
- d Discount rate (%)
- NPV Net present value (€)
- R Revenue (€)
- C Costs (€)
- n Numbers of years (0..to..N)
- CI Total initial costs for PV and APV structure in year 0 (€)
- COM Annual operation and maintenance (OM) cost (€)
- N Project lifetime, years
- dg Energy yield degradation rate (0.5% per year)
- Ppeak Installed solar capacity at APV plant (50 kW)
- Q Performance ratio (value of only 60% is considered, decentralized grid)
- ISTC Constant value (solar irradiance at standard test condition, i.e., 1 kW/m2)
- G Solar radiation falling on solar panels at the project site (kWh/m2.year)
3.5. Diesel Pumping System
- P Hydraulic power required for pumping (W)
- ρ Density of water (1000 kg/m3)
- g Acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s2)
- Q Flow rate of the pump (0.001 m3/s, assumed to be operated for about 3 h a day, available water for irrigation in a day will be about 7.2 L/m2)
- Tdh Total dynamic head (m)
- η Efficiency of the pump
3.6. Field Survey and Cases under Analysis
3.6.1. Case 1: Traditional Farming, Rain Fed Irrigation
3.6.2. Case 2: Irrigated Farming, Diesel Pump
3.6.3. Case 3: Irrigated Farming, Solar Pump
3.6.4. Case 4: APV for Irrigation and Electricity Supply
4. Results and Discussions
4.1. Cost Calculation
4.2. Revenue Calculation
- Salad: 3000 to 15000 CFA/plot (3.81 to 22.87 €/plot)
- Cabbage: 2500 to 3500 CFA/plot (3.81 to 5.34 €/plot)
- Tomato: 3000 to 6000 CFA/plot (4.57 to 9.15 €/plot)
- Mint: 4000 to 12000 CFA/plot (6.10 to 18.29 €/plot)
- Okra: 3000 to 5000 CFA/plot (4.57 to 7.62 €/plot)
4.3. Financial Indicators for Cases 1–3
4.4. Case of Agrivoltaic (APV)
4.4.1. Scenario 1, Benefits to Investor
4.4.2. Scenario 2, Overall Benefits (Combined of Both Farmer and Investor)
4.5. Sensitivity Analysis
4.5.1. Diesel Based Irrigation System, Case for Farmers
4.5.2. APV System, Case for Investors
4.5.3. APV System, Both Cases (Combined Benefits and Shading Effect)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameters | Case 1, Traditional | Case 2, Diesel Powered Irrigation | Case 3, Solar PV Irrigation |
---|---|---|---|
Land area | 0.15 ha | 0.15 ha | 0.15 ha |
Irrigation type | Rainfed | Diesel pumps for groundwater pumping from the well | Solar PV powered pumps for groundwater pumping from the well |
Farming method | Traditional, human labor and animals use, 1 crop cycle per year | Cash crops (green vegetables), 4 crop cycles per year | Cash crops (green vegetables), 4 crop cycles per year |
Main produces considered | Sorghum, millet, cowpea, and peanut | Salad, cabbage, tomato, mint, and okra | Salad, cabbage, tomato, mint, and okra |
Other items not considered in revenue | - | Possible electricity generation and sale using the same diesel engine. Theoretically, it will be possible to schedule water pumping during the daytime and electricity generation in the evening. | - |
Cost parameters | Farming land preparation, seeds, planting, fertilizers, harvest, etc. | Farming land preparation, seeds, planting, fertilizers, harvest, etc. Additionally, investment for diesel pump (depreciation of the first year), operating costs due to diesel consumption per year. | Farming land preparation, seeds, planting, fertilizers, harvest, etc. Additionally, investment for solar pump (depreciation of the first year), a small operating/maintenance (O/M) costs per year. |
Cooperative or community loan share | 50% of total cost | 50% of the total cost | 50% of the total cost |
Loan interest rate | 10% for a period of 8 months | 10% for a period of 8 months | 10% for a period of 8 months |
Revenue | Self-consumption (market value set as pseudo selling price) | Selling the harvested cash crops to the market (e.g., in Kodo) or sales to local traders who re-sale the produce to the city of Niamey | Selling the harvested cash crops to the market (e.g., in Kodo) or sales to local traders who re-sale the produce to the city of Niamey |
Target economic indicator | Gross margin, farm profit, and B/C ratio | Gross margin, farm profit, and B/C ratio | Gross margin, farm profit, and B/C ratio |
Environmental indicator | - | CO2 emission in a year from the diesel pump | - |
Case 1, Traditional | Case 2, Diesel Powered Irrigation | Case 3, Solar PV Irrigation | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CFA/ha-Year | (€/ha-Year) | CFA/ha-Year | (€/ha-Year) | CFA/ha-Year | (€/ha-Year) | |
Variable costs | ||||||
Human labor for different activities | 60,000 | 91.50 | 1,000,000 | 1524.50 | 1,000,000 | 1524.50 |
Machinery use (hand tractor, plowing) | 20,000 | 30.50 | 200,000 | 304.90 | 200,000 | 304.90 |
Seed | 4000 | 6.10 | 600,000 | 914.70 | 600,000 | 914.70 |
Fertilizer | 9000 | 13.70 | 700,000 | 1067.10 | 700,000 | 1067.10 |
Pesticides | 1000 | 1.50 | 100,000 | 152.40 | 100,000 | 152.40 |
Miscellaneous (packaging, etc.) | 3000 | 4.60 | 200,000 | 304.90 | 200,000 | 304.90 |
Irrigation use | 0 | 0.00 | 5,000,000 | 7,622.40 | 437,307 | 666.67 |
Subtotal variable costs | 97,000 | 147.90 | 7,800,000 | 11,891.0 | 3,237,307 | 4935.2 |
Fixed costs | ||||||
Depreciation of hand-made agro tools (for human labor) | 10,000 | 15.20 | 10,000 | 15.20 | 10,000 | 15.20 |
Depreciation of diesel or solar-powered pump | 0 | 0 | 937,086 | 1428.57 | 874,613.33 | 1333.33 |
Subtotal fixed costs | 10,000 | 15.20 | 947,086 | 1443.80 | 884,613 | 1348.60 |
Financial costs | 3567 | 5.00 | 291,570 | 444.00 | 137,397 | 209.46 |
Total costs | 110,567 | 169.00 | 9,038,655 | 13,779.00 | 4,259,317 | 6493.26 |
Crop Types | Average Production (kg/ha) | Average Selling Price (€/kg) |
---|---|---|
Millet | 449 | 0.38 |
Sorghum | 305 | 0.35 |
Cowpea | 186 | 0.40 |
Peanut | 414 | 0.37 |
Crop Types | No. of Plots (25 m2) | CFA/Plot | €/Plot |
---|---|---|---|
Salad | 20 | 5000 | 7.62 |
Cabbage | 10 | 3000 | 4.57 |
Tomato | 10 | 3500 | 5.34 |
Mint | 10 | 6000 | 9.15 |
Okra | 10 | 3500 | 5.34 |
Description | Value | Unit |
---|---|---|
Radiation at standard test condition, Istc | 1 | kW/m2 |
Solar yield degradation rate, dg | 0.5 | % |
Peak power of PV system, Pp | 50 | kW |
Performance ratio, Q | 60 | % |
PV size for irrigation pump, Pirrigation | 2 | kW |
Discount rate in Niger, d | 6 [45] | % |
Grid tariff for electricity selling, Pel | 0.10 | €/kWh |
Number of households | 400 | numbers |
Annual electricity demand per household | 300 | kWh/year |
Solar PV system cost | 1200 | €/kW |
APV structure costs | 50 | €/kW |
Repair, operation, maintenance costs | 2 | % of initial cost |
Solar radiation data on an inclined surface (tilt at 15°) | 2244 (Meteonorm V. 8) | kWh/m2-year |
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Neupane Bhandari, S.; Schlüter, S.; Kuckshinrichs, W.; Schlör, H.; Adamou, R.; Bhandari, R. Economic Feasibility of Agrivoltaic Systems in Food-Energy Nexus Context: Modelling and a Case Study in Niger. Agronomy 2021, 11, 1906. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11101906
Neupane Bhandari S, Schlüter S, Kuckshinrichs W, Schlör H, Adamou R, Bhandari R. Economic Feasibility of Agrivoltaic Systems in Food-Energy Nexus Context: Modelling and a Case Study in Niger. Agronomy. 2021; 11(10):1906. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11101906
Chicago/Turabian StyleNeupane Bhandari, Srijana, Sabine Schlüter, Wilhelm Kuckshinrichs, Holger Schlör, Rabani Adamou, and Ramchandra Bhandari. 2021. "Economic Feasibility of Agrivoltaic Systems in Food-Energy Nexus Context: Modelling and a Case Study in Niger" Agronomy 11, no. 10: 1906. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11101906
APA StyleNeupane Bhandari, S., Schlüter, S., Kuckshinrichs, W., Schlör, H., Adamou, R., & Bhandari, R. (2021). Economic Feasibility of Agrivoltaic Systems in Food-Energy Nexus Context: Modelling and a Case Study in Niger. Agronomy, 11(10), 1906. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11101906