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Renewable Energy Developments in IndiaRenewable energy developments

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Renewable Energy Developments in IndiaRenewable energy developments

  1. 1. Renewable eneRgy Developments in inDia TADIPATRI ENGINEERING COLLEGE T.UPENDRA BABU A.RAMAKANTH REDDY 13HU1A0243 13HU1A0228 II EEE
  2. 2. Sustainable Development A Development is sustainable when “ the needs of the present are to be met without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”. Sustainable development is more than just “Environment Conservation”. It is development that is environmentally, socially and economically sustainable.
  3. 3. Energy is ‘prime mover’ of the development process. There is a direct correlation of energy consumption and economic growth of a society / country. Economic growth calls for increasing use of energy. ENERGY FOR DEVELOPMENT
  4. 4. • Energy access is related to poverty, development, gender disparity, environment, health and also sustainability. • Over 3 billion people in developing countries today rely on traditional biomass for cooking and heating • About 1.5 billion people are without electricity. • Provision of basic energy services to these energy- poor citizens is a challenge world over and particularly in developing countries. • Energy access is crucial to inclusive and sustainable economic growth.
  5. 5. Challenges of Energy Access in Developing Countries
  6. 6. Household Energy The ‘Energy Ladder’ Around 70% of the country’s population still rely on biomass fuels
  7. 7. TOTAL INSTALLED CAPACITY 2,30,073 MW (Dec, 2013) GROSS GENERATION 940 BUs PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION 879 kWh / Annum (2011-12) ENERGY SHORTAGE about 5.1 % (June 2014) PEAKING SHORTAGE about 5.5 % INDIAN POWER SCENARIO
  8. 8. Indian Power Sector at a Glance Total installed capacity : 2,30,073 MW Thermal 1,35,610 Hydro 39, 788 Gas 20,359 Renewable 29,536 Nuclear 4780 • Renewable contributes 29,536 MW – 12.83% • If we take large hydro and RE – 30%
  9. 9. Indian Renewable Energy at a Glance Total Installed capacity 29,536 MW Renewables constitute about 12.83 % of the total power generation installed capacity in the country 9
  10. 10.  Deployment of renewable power during the 11th Plan (2007-2012) has made it the second largest source after conventional power.  A target of 14,000 MW capacity addition was achieved during 2007-2012 (the 11th Plan).  A capacity addition of 30,000 MW is being targeted during the 12th Plan (2012-17) GRID INTERACTIVE RENEWABLE POWER 3
  11. 11. Renewable Energy: Credentials  Harnessed 12% of the estimated potential  5th Position in overall RE Capacity Installations world- wide  5th largest Wind installed capacity world-wide  2nd largest number of installed Biogas plants  6 million decentralized systems in use  Renewable is the second largest source of power generation after thermal.
  12. 12. Wind Power Potential : 100,000 MW (as per C-WET estimates at 80 m hub height) Achievement : 19,993 MW 11th Plan Target/ Achievement: 9,000 MW / 10,260 MW (2007-12) Deployment target 12th Plan : 15,000 MW. (2012-17) Strategy:  GBI scheme reviewed and continued during 12th Plan  Wind Resource activities to be substantially increased.  Evacuation infrastructure to be developed.
  13. 13. Solar Energy and Solar Mission 13 Potential : 30-50 MW/ sq. km Achievement : 2,080 MW Over 1.9 million SPV Systems installed / distributed 2010-13 Target : 1100 MW Achievement 1684 MW Target for 12th Plan : 4000 MW. (2013-17) Target for 13th Plan : 15000 MW. (2017-22)
  14. 14. 14 Solar Mission Targets  20,000 MW grid by 2022  2.000 MW off-grid by 2022  20 million households covered by solar lighting  20 m sq meter of solar thermal Objectives  Achieve grid parity by 2022  Increase domestic manufacturing capacity  Develop eco system for solar industry  Develop manpower  Support R & D
  15. 15. R&D Strategy for Solar research in India  R&D in SPV and Solar thermal has been undertaken since late seventies  Renewed Thrust on R&D in JNN Solar Mission  R&D thrust areas are identified to achieve technical and cost goals  Centers of Excellence created in research, education, Testing and Characterization  Industry involvement and Consortia approach promoted including partners from both India & abroad  Technology incubation and Validation  International collaborations
  16. 16. R&D in Solar Thermal Systems Indigenous development of Solar Water Heating systems and Solar Cookers and full commercialization. Well established manufacturing base.  Second generation technology developed using Selective coating absorbers Number of modes developed for Solar Box type and concentrating dish cookers. Scheffler cookers for indoor cooking for large kitchens. Concentrator technologies for steam generation and industrial process heat applications
  17. 17. Next Five Year Projections (Installed Capacities in MW ) Source Installed capacity In March, 2012 Capacity addition Target for 2012-17 Target installed capacity in 2017 Wind power 17,352 15,000 32,500 Small Hydro 3,395 2,100 5,500 Biomass Power 1,150 500 1,700 Biogases Cogeneration 1,985 1,500 3,500
  18. 18. Contribution of Renewables after 12th Plan ( 2017) At the end of 12th Plan, •the total power generation capacity of the country is expected to be 318,800 MW Renewables are expected to contribute about 17% in this capacity (55,000 MW) and Over 9% in the electricity mix
  19. 19. Renewable Energy in 2017 RE capacity is likely to cross 55,000 MW by 2017 (17% of total Capacity) The current contribution of 6% in electricity mix is likely to go up to 9% in 2017. Wind power capacity is likely to cross 33,000 MW Solar power capacity likely to cross 10,000 MW if targets under JNNSM are to be achieved
  20. 20. CONCLUSION We have to get the updated types in the power generation of the renewable resources. The implementation of the solar plates have to take place in the rural areas. Better to choose the renewable resources for the development of the nation in the earlier stage.

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