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Western Engineering finds new way of utilizing solar farms at night
Monday, August 16, 2010
New technology from The University of Western Ontario utilizing photovoltaic (PV) solar farms at night will help in connecting more renewable energy sources like wind turbines to Ontario's grid, increasing power transmission limits, and providing a low-cost way of improving grid voltages and system performance.
Wind farms ramp up their production in
the nights due to high winds but are unable to connect to the grid due to
voltage fluctuations and lack of adequate transmission capacity. Restricted by
the current working model, the best way to integrate more wind renewables on
the grid is to build new lines, which is very expensive considering the cost is
approximately $2 million per kilometre.
For a fraction of the cost (an
estimated $100,000), this novel nighttime control of PV solar farms, developed
by the research group of Rajiv Varma of Western Engineering, would utilize PV
solar farms during the night when they are completely idle, to provide much
needed voltage control for nearby wind turbines to send increased power to the
grid.
Two utilities, London Hydro and
Bluewater Power, have offered to implement and showcase this PV solar
technology – for the first time in Canada – on two of their 10 kilowatts (kW)
PV solar systems for providing voltage control on their networks. If
successful, there is a potential for retrofitting several PV systems with this
new control for providing benefits to the power systems.
Varma, an electrical engineering
professor at Western, is the project co-lead in a recently awarded $6 million
research grant from Ontario Centre of Excellence for this project entitled,
Large-Scale Photovoltaic Solar Power Integration in Transmission and
Distribution Networks.
“This will not only increase the
penetration of more wind into the system but it will also create additional
revenue for PV solar farmers that will now see their farms functioning 24 hours
a day,” explains Varma. “But most importantly, this technology will also make
Ontario’s power supply greener and cleaner.”
The project employs 16 faculty members,
10 from Western and six from the University of Waterloo. It is supported by
Ontario Power Authority (OPA), and four major industries/utilities, including
Hydro One, First Solar Canada, London Hydro and Bluewater Power, Sarnia.
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