1. Introduction
The world is under an energy transition from conventional to renewable and clean energy sources. The countering of global climate change and the reduction of energy poverty are the main reasons to carry out this transition [
1]. Nevertheless, this conversion is not being carried on in an equal manner amongst the nations. While some countries are already about to reach a 100% renewable energy scenario [
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7], and others are in the transition [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13], some have not reached even 10% [
14,
15,
16,
17]. Among many other reasons, such as economical [
18,
19,
20,
21], social [
22,
23], political [
24,
25,
26], technical [
27], or multicriteria issues [
28], renewable and low-carbon energies are not easy to implement in national and large-scale scenarios.
Due to its random production, which is dependent on the climate conditions, the consumption of the renewable energy (wind and solar, mainly) can be summed up by the phrase ‘use it or lose it’ [
29], giving only few options of consumption if it is not instantly used [
30]. Energy storage and smart grids are the most mentioned solutions in the literature review [
31]. Moreover, other technical issues—such as the load frequency variation of the electrical current—have to be addressed in order to dispatch proper and reliable electricity [
32]. In this sense, innovative approaches of renewable energy management have been developed in recent years [
33].
In addition, the complexity of a national transmission and distribution grid makes the implementation of renewable energies in a national scenario more difficult. Whereas the use of renewable energy is working properly in local and small scenarios, a national electricity system does not allow us to coordinate the activity of generation and consumption [
34].
This is the case for the Mexican electricity system, which is still dominated by fossil-fuel-based generation, as it considers this source “more reliable and controllable” due to its continuous working hours [
35,
36]. Moreover, although there is a national goal to achieve a share of 35% renewable energy by 2024, different challenges, including the coordination of the transmission and distribution grid [
37], are still a brake to reaching such an achievement.
Furthermore, in the literature review, to the best of our knowledge, a study was not found that shows an analysis of the extensive implementation of renewable energy at a small scale, especially in the housing sector, and what would be the corresponding benefits of this implementation.
Due to these reasons, in this document, the extensive use of on-site renewable energy is proposed for the Mexican housing sector, instead of medium and large renewable-energy plants that introduce their generated electricity to the SEN, yielding their priority to fossil-fuel-based electricity.
For this, a model for the estimation of the generated electricity on an annual basis considering the extensive implementation of photovoltaic (PV) roofs is necessary. Furthermore, the model also calculates the instantaneous electricity demand compared to the instantaneous electricity generation of the PV roofs, considering the national average solar radiation.
As such, different scenarios are considered in order to determine their influence on the Mexican electricity sector. These scenarios comprise the level of penetration of PV roofs into Mexican households. In each scenario, an analysis of the energy saving, the CO2 mitigation, and the cost reductions of the transmission and distribution grid are estimated. Finally, the feasibility and affordability of the implementation is discussed, considering a costs/benefits study of the different scenarios.
The advantage of the model is seen in the novel analysis of the renewable energy usage in the Mexican electricity scenario, while the disadvantage is focused on the lack of accuracy due to the general approach considered in the document. Nevertheless, we believe that the analysis proposed here would help to show the main benefits of the extensive implementation of renewable electricity generation in the Mexican housing sector. A synthetized flowchart of the methodology can be seen in
Figure 1.
The first two steps of the flowchart are focused on the 2018 status of the transmission and distribution grid, and the electricity generation of each source in Mexico.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. National Transmission and Distribution Grid
The Mexican national electricity sector is run by the Mexican Federal Commission of Electricity (CFE, initials in Spanish), a government-owned company that has shared the electricity generation with private companies since the so-called Mexican Energy Reform was issued in 2013. Nonetheless, the SEN (transmission and distribution grid) is completely managed by the CFE through the National Center of Energy Control (CENACE, initials in Spanish).
One characteristic of the SEN is the high level of interconnection between the generators and consumers throughout the entire country. The SEN comprises four interconnected systems in the following Mexican municipalities:
National Interconnected System (NIS): from Puerto Peñasco, in the northern state of Sonora, to Cozumel, in the southern state of Quintana Roo. This is the biggest Mexican interconnected system.
Baja California Interconnected System (BCIS) comprises the municipalities of Ensenada, Tijuana, Tecate and Mexicali, in the state of Baja California, and San Luis Rio Colorado, in the state of Sonora. Furthermore, this system is interconnected to the Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC) of California, USA.
Baja California Sur Interconnected System (BCSIS): from the municipality of Loreto to Los Cabos, in the state of Baja California Sur. This system is completely insolated.
Mulege Interconnected System (MIS): from the municipality of Mulege to Bahia de Todos los Santos, in the state of Baja California Sur. This system is completely insolated.
Furthermore, the NIS has 11 international interconnections with the following gates:
United States of America: Ribereña-Ascarate, Anapra-Diablo, Ojinaga-Presidio, Piedras Negras-Eagle-Pass, Nuevo-Laredo-Laredo, Cumbres F.-Railroad, Cumbres F.-Planta Frontera, Matamoros-Brownsville and Matamoros-Military.
Belize: Xul Ha-West.
Guatemala: Tapachula-Los Brillantes.
The biggest interconnected system is the NIS, which embraces the Mexican continental territory (92.7%), while the BCIS, BCSIS and MIS are located at the Baja California peninsula, sharing only 7.3% of the national territory. In terms of population, in 2018, the NIS managed the electricity of 122,483,587 Mexicans (96.4% of the total population), while the other three systems provided electricity to 4,608,055 people (3.6%). A map of the SEN can be seen in
Figure 2.
The SEN—comprising NIS, BCIS, BCSIS and MIS—can also be divided into transmission and distribution grids. The national transmission grid is considered to be for long-distance electricity transportation (200–500 km), with a voltage level range of 69–400 kV, whereas the general distribution grid (to be dispatched to the final consumers) is considered to be for medium-distance transportation (10–50 km), with a voltage level range of 1–35 kV. In 2018, the national transmission grid had a length of 108,018 km, while the general distribution grid had a total length of 512,520 km [
38].
2.2. Renewable Energy Generation through the Transmission and Distribution Grid
In order to analyze the renewable energy technologies in Mexico, an analysis of all of the generation technologies used in Mexico was carried out. In 2018, the installed capacity of generation in the country was 70,053 MW. The distribution according to the type of technology can be seen in
Table 1.
From
Table 1, one can notice that only 28.9 % out of the 70,053 MW installed capacity in Mexico can be considered to be clean and/or renewable, i.e., the technologies of hydroelectricity, wind, PV, geothermal and bioenergy. Nevertheless, it is worthwhile to mention that, during 2018, PV and wind had an increase of 1316 MW and 942 MW, respectively, owning the highest growth rates among the other technologies [
38].
This is because in Mexico, as was aforementioned, in 2013, an Energy Reform was issued to allow private electricity generation. In this sense, several companies started to produce electricity with wind, PV, and natural-gas–based technology, mainly, along with the so-called ‘Independent Producers’, who—since 1992—have had permission to generate electricity with various technologies (mainly fossil-fuel based) for the following purposes: (a) to sell it to CFE, (b) to export it, and (c) for self-consumption. In none of these three cases should the activities be considered as an economic competition to CFE. With the Energy Reform, however, private companies were allowed to generate electricity with a higher profit than the Independent Producers, due to the CFE paying a higher cost for each MWh produced [
39].
Nevertheless, in the case of private electricity generation, the companies have to pay the CFE a fee for the electricity transmission and distribution. This cost is called a ‘porting fee’, and has to be covered regardless of the generation technology. Because of this reason, several renewable energy companies filed a dispute to the Mexican Supreme Court of Justice in 2020 against the porting fee, claiming that this payment “discourage the clean energy production in Mexico”.
Furthermore, due to the random nature of renewable energy production, the CENACE has difficulties in dispatching this generated electricity, especially during hours of low demand, i.e., 23–9 h the next day. For a typical summer day, an average of 36,982 MW is registered during low demand, while the daily average is 39,629 MW, with a maximum peak of 42,873 MW at 17:00 h [
40].
As such, the CENACE requires that the electricity from private companies:
…must be incorporated [to the SEN] by means of the intervention and backup of power plants with total [electricity generation] availability and that dispatch planning and operation reservoirs, as well as related services that make its feasible performance, which requires of the correct specification of the associated products required in order to give more certainty to all the market stakeholders [
41].
In this sense, renewable energies struggle to be dispatched because their production is lower compered to fossil-fuel–based energies. In
Table 2, the average hours of working of each generation technology is displayed.
From
Table 2, one can see that combined cycle technology, based on natural gas, has a high working rate compared to wind and PV. This can explain the belief that natural-gas-based generation is seen as more ‘controllable’ than renewable generation [
35], especially when unexpected demands are presented. This, along with the porting fee, means that renewable energy in Mexico is still seen as an expensive and unreliable technology.
2.3. Loss on the Transmission and Distribution Grid
Moreover, another obstacle that the generators have, private or public, is the electricity loss throughout the transmission and distribution grid. In the case of Mexico in 2018, this loss is divided as shown in
Table 3.
According to
Table 3, the total loss in Mexico in 2018 was 15.53% of the total generated electricity. In the transmission grid, mostly by the wires and transformation facilities heating, was 10.58% out of the total generated electricity, whereas in the distribution grid, mostly by incidents of thieving and mismeasuring, was 4.95% out of the total generation.
As such, as it can be seen, renewable energies in Mexico have their most challenging phase on the transmission and distribution grid, which is not under their management. This, additional to their random generation, makes that these kind of technologies look for innovative solutions.
Therefore, in this document, for renewable energy technologies, a solution approach for the inconvenience of the porting fee, the lack of priority given by the CENACE, and the loss throughout the SEN is given by the extensive installation of PV roofs in the Mexican residential sector. This is expected to reduce the transportation of electricity at long and medium distance (10–500 km), to use the electricity in the moment that it is generated, and to dispense with the porting fee.
2.4. PV Roof Technology
As was already mentioned, the extensive placement of PV cells on the roofs of the Mexican housing sector is proposed. The first purpose of this is to avoid the use of the transmission grid at long and medium distances. A general scheme of the proposed PV technology is displayed in
Figure 3:
The proposed technology comprises the use of electricity storage to be consumed at short and medium times. Nevertheless, the main approach of the PV generation is the incorporation of the surplus generated energy into the distribution grid, managed by CENACE. This is expected to liberate the transmission grid if the PV roofs are applied in an extensive manner in the country.
2.5. Available Roofs in the Mexican Residential Sector
In 2018, there were approximately 34.73 million dwellings allocated in the Mexican residential stock. According to the National Survey of Households Incomes and Expenditures 2018 (abbreviated to ENIGH in Spanish) from the Mexican National Institute of Statistics and Geography (abbreviated to INEGI in Spanish), the distribution according to the type of construction is shown in
Table 4.
From
Table 4, one can easily notice that more than 93% of the households in Mexico are able, in principle, to install PV technology in their roof, considering that detached and semi-detached houses have an independent roof, where Mexican people install water and gas tanks [
42].
In the case of apartments, most of the households with this type of construction are located at the greater metropolitan area of Mexico City (1.58 million apartments) [
42]. If it is considered that an apartment building in Mexico City is, on average, four stories high according to the Mexican National Housing Commission (CONAVI, abbreviation in Spanish) [
43], and that 1 out of 4 apartments has an independent roof, 395,933 roofs might be available for the installation of PV cells.
As such, neglecting communal and nonresidential rooms, in 2018 there were approximately 32.73 million roofs available for solar renewable energy, if it is also considered that approximately 100,000 dwellings already had this kind of technology in the country in the same year [
44].
2.6. Architypes of Dwellings in Mexico
According to the ENIGH, Mexican households can be divided by their size and their number of occupants, as is displayed in
Table 5 and
Table 6.
In
Table 5 and
Table 6, three kinds of architypes are proposed for the present study, namely small (architype 1), medium (architype 2) and large (architype 3). These three architypes assume a uniform distribution of the number of occupants concordant with the building size, assuming that a small house shelters few people, and vice versa. As such, the distribution is the following:
Architype 1: in all dwellings of ≤45 m2 live families of 1–2 people.
Architype 2: families of 1–5 people live in dwellings of <45 m2.
Architype 3: all families of >5 people live in dwellings of >100 m2.
Small numbers of people living in a large dwelling and many people living in a small household are neglected, even though these situations might be present in the country [
42]. As such,
Table 7 can be constructed. The table assumes that 32.73 million dwellings are able to have a PV roof in 2018, neglecting apartments, non-residential rooms, and households with installed PV.
For each architype, two respective levels of consumption and generation are proposed. These levels are estimated based on the average number of occupants, in the case of consumption, and based on the average roof surface, in the case of generation.
For the calculation of the consumption, it is assumed that, in Mexico, in 2018, there was a consumption in the residential sector of around 62,000 GWh [
38]. In the same year, the population was 126.2 million inhabitants [
38]. With this, a yearly average consumption of 491.3 kWh per capita is supposed. It is worthwhile to mention that this consumption is only in the residential sector, neglecting the other energy activities of Mexicans (industry, commercial etc.).
In order to calculate the generation, the average national irradiance in the Mexican territory was taken into account, i.e., 5.3 kWh/m
2 per day [
45]. Furthermore, if the average efficiency of the PV cells is set at 17.3% [
46] (considering this figure as the most common amongst commercial PV cells, i.e., polycrystalline silicon cells), the electricity generation is estimated as follows [
46]:
where
PVeff is the efficiency of the PV cell (dimensionless);
Pout is output power, i.e., the generated electricity (kWh); and
Pin is the input power, i.e., the solar radiation (kWh). Therefore, if the average irradiance is given in kWh/m
2 per day, the annual electricity production by m
2 is set as 334.7 kWh/m
2.
As such, considering the average consumption of 491.3 kWh/person and the average generation of 334.7 kWh/m
2,
Table 8 was constructed. For each architype, an average number of persons (consumption) and an average PV-cell surface (generation) was considered as follows:
Architype 1: ocupants, 1.3. PV-cell surface, 2.0 m2.
Architype 2: occupants, 3.5. PV-cell surface, 5.2 m2.
Architype 3: occupants, 5.3. PV-cell surface, 7.9 m2.
The number of occupants was estimated based on
Table 6, whereas the average surface of the PV cells was calculated according to the average consumption of each architype, estimated from a backward calculation of the mean number of occupants, considering that the electricity production must cover the total consumption of the dwelling. In this way,
Table 8 was constructed.
As such, with these three proposed architypes, along with their respective consumptions and generations, three different scenarios of extensive PV roof installation in Mexico were carried out.
4. Discussion
4.1. Environmental Benefits
If the proposed approach were applied in the country, there would be a certain environmental benefit, reflected mainly in the CO
2 mitigation. As such, by considering the CO
2-equivalent (CO
2e) emission factor of the Mexican generation plants in 2018, i.e., 0.527 TonCO
2e/MWh [
51], and assuming that the total generation of the PV roofs replaces the generation by the fossil-fuel–based technologies,
Table 14 can be constructed.
The mitigation presented in any scenario is much higher than the
Horario de Verano program, which—in 2018—had a CO
2eq mitigation of 498 thousand tons [
47], with an energy saving of 945.29 GWh [
47]. As a matter of fact, the actual PV generation in 2018 alone was 2.3 times higher than the mentioned governmental program. This reaffirms the necessity of using innovative approaches of renewable energies beyond national saving programs that seem to be insufficient by themselves for achieving the signed international agreements of CO
2eq reduction.
4.2. Economic Benefits
By considering the average price of MWh generated in Mexico in 2018 as 71.88 USD [
52], calculated by the Mexican Escrow for Saving Electricity (FIDE, acronym in Spanish), the money saving in each scenario can be seen in
Table 15.
From
Table 15, one can conclude that any of the three scenarios provides high money savings compared to other annual-based savings, such as the
Horario de Verano (67.95 USD Million [
47]), or the extensive use of natural ventilation in Mexico (900 USD Million [
48]).
4.3. Economic and Technical Feasibility
Any of the presented scenarios could be financed by a governmental program, such as the
Horario de Verano, or the substitution of incandescent lightbulbs and/or obsolete refrigerators [
47], as were carried out in previous years. Alternatively, it could perhaps be an association between the governmental programs, through the Ministry of Energy, and the private initiative, through renewable-energy companies, which have been willing to invest in Mexico since the Energy Reform of 2013. Moreover, the final consumer, as the center of the trade, could provide an impulse for the projects by investing on their own PV-roofs, as well as by looking for financing from the aforementioned governmental programs, or even from financial entities such as banks [
44].
In any case, any stakeholder is able to receive money savings and/or profits. Governmental entities and final consumers can save money by not using the energy that is not produced, freeing the transmission grid in the case of the CENACE, and lowering the electricity bills, in the case of the final consumers. On the other hand, clean-energy producers can increase their production, cheapening the costs of this kind of energy production.
On the subject of technical feasibility, the SEN, and especially the distribution grid, is already prepared to exchange generated electricity, as is shown in the issued law of Residential Distributed Generation Power Plants and Distributed Clean Generation lower than 0.5 MW, with an interconnection contract with CFE through the filial CFE Basic Services Provider [
53].
The framework of the law considers that the generated electricity by the PV roofs has to be distributed through the distribution grid, with voltages of 1–35 kV, amongst consumers located near the residential power plant [
53]. In this sense, the three schemes of managing the generated electricity by the residential power plants (PV-roofs) are the following:
Net Metering: the customer consumes and generates energy in the same supply contract. This energy is offset against each other, and a single billing is issued.
Net Billing: the energy consumed that CFE bills towards the customer is independent of the energy that the customer generates and sells to the CFE; that is, it is not compensated. The consumed electricity must be associated with a supply contract.
Total Energy Sale: the client sells all of the energy generated to the CFE. There is no customer supply contract with the CFE.
For the purposes of this document, the Net Metering contract best suits the interconnection and exchange of electricity between the producer (household) and distributer (CENACE), producing an energy balance of production and consumption. In the case of the Net Billing and Total Energy Sale schemes, CENACE could not carry out this energy balance due to the lack of information of the electricity generation by the households. Moreover, in the scheme of Total Energy Sale, it is implied that a device of energy storage would be needed in order to dispatch the energy necessities of the dwelling, meaning that the proposed approach would be more expensive and difficult to implement.
As such, the benefits of the proposed strategy rely on the economical saving, mostly of the final users, and the environmental benefits, which are more focused on the national scenario, reducing the millions of TonCO2eq released into the atmosphere, reaching—in a faster manner—the signed agreements, such as Paris and Kyoto.
Finally, the feasibility of the implementation of the approach depends on the technical capability of the SEN and CENACE. In this sense, these Mexican institutions already have the technology in certain regions of the country, awaiting the expansion to the total national territory in the coming years.
5. Conclusions
In Mexico, the issue of the lack of priority given by the CFE to renewable energy production was addressed in this document by the proposal of the extensive use of on-site PV cells in the Mexican residential sector. An additional purpose of the proposal was to liberate the transmission grid by generating clean energy at the very same place where it is consumed, thereby avoiding the electricity loss throughout the SEN.
Moreover, the technology for carrying out this generation–consumption relationship has already settled on Mexico through the CENACE, which is the system in charge of balancing the generated energy, generally from large power plants (above 200 MW of installed capacity), and the final consumers. For this, the CENACE uses the SEN, leaving only three relatively small interconnected systems in the Baja California Peninsula to manage their own generation–consumption.
Therefore, this disadvantage of the SEN with respect to random renewable energies is addressed by the use of extensive on-site generation in the Mexican residential sector. As the Mexican government already has three kinds of schemes for an energy trade between small producers and the CFE (Net Metering, Net Billing, and Total Energy Sale), the scheme of Net Metering was hereby proposed to distribute the instant energy production from the residential roofs amongst their nearby consumers, using the distribution grid of the SEN.
In this sense, it was found that the three scenarios proposed in this document, considering the different levels of penetration into the Mexican housing sector, achieved promising benefits, both environmental and economic. For Scenario A, 3418 Million USD and 25 Million TonCO2e could be saved and mitigated, respectively; whereas, for Scenarios B and C, the money saving and the CO2 mitigation could be 1709 Million USD and 12.5 Million TonCO2e, and 854 Million USD and 6.2 Million Ton CO2e, respectively. Furthermore, the initial investments seem affordable if there is a collaboration among the main stakeholders, namely the government, private initiatives and final consumers, which always show the multiple benefits that come with this national approach.
As a final comment, it should be mentioned that the extensive simultaneous use of PV generation in a national scenario, such as that presented here, could be carried out if the transmission and distribution grid is highly interconnected, which is the case in Mexico. When a national electricity system has several regional insolated grids, an independent analysis has to be carried on for every regional system.