Status of Micro-Hydrokinetic River Technology Turbines Application for Rural Electrification in Africa
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Energy Technologies for Rural Off-Grid Applications
2.1.1. Diesel Generators
2.1.2. Wind Energy
2.1.3. Solar Power
2.2. µ-Hydrokinetic River Technology
Device Name | Manufacturer | Turbine Type | Min/Max Speed | Power Output |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gorlov helical turbine | Lucid Energy Ltd. (Dallas, TX, USA) [26] | Helical Darieus axis | (0.6 m/s) to no limit | Up to 20 kW, depends on size |
Water current turbine | Thropton Energy Services (Northumberland, UK) [34] | Axis flow propeller | (0.6 m/s)/depends on the diameter | Up to 2 kW at 240 V |
Davidson–Hill (HDV) turbine | Tidal Energy Ltd., (West Perth, Australia) | Cross-flow turbine | Min. 2 m/s | From 4.6 kW |
Stream | Seabell Int. Co., Ltd. (Tokyo, Japan) | Dual, cross-axis | (0.6 m/s) to no limit | 0.5–10 kW models |
EnCurrent hydro turbine | New Energy Corporation Inc. (Calgary, AB, Canada) | Cross-axis | Max. 3 m/s | 5–10 kW |
Free-stream Darrieus turbine | Water Alternative Hydro Solutions Ltd. (Toronto, OT, Canada) | Cross-axis | (0.5 m/s)/depends on diameter | 2–3 kW |
2.3. Economic Analysis
3. Case Studies
3.1. Southern Africa Region
3.2. Western Africa Region
3.3. Northern Africa Region
3.4. Eastern Africa Region
3.5. Central Africa Region
4. Discussion
4.1. Barriers to µ-Hydrokinetic River Technology Development in Africa
- (1)
- A Lack of local skills and technology to ensure the sustainability of the system. Most of the hydrokinetic turbines are industrially manufactured in industrialized nations by utilizing sophisticated components, and the technology is also complex in nature. The initial costs of such technologies are expensive. Coupled with a lack of technical expertise and skills in developing countries, the operation and maintenance costs of imported technologies are expensive in cases of breakdowns, as the expertise need to be imported.
- (2)
- The legal and institutional framework in developing countries is very complex. For instance, the installation of such a technology requires approval from the water resources authority of a given country. The procedure is unfavorably long, such that stakeholders tend to lose motivation for obtaining approval.
- (3)
- A lack of political goodwill in developing countries has contributed to the low-paced adoption of the technology. For instance, Kenya’s political atmosphere at all levels involves the use of people’s situations to win their votes. The provision of electricity is one of the priorities used by the politicians in Kenya. In order to remain relevant after getting into power, they tend to thwart any development agendas so that they use the same issue again for their gain. The community also lacks general information and awareness.
- (4)
- Limited to no research has led to a lack of hydrogeological data that would provide baseline information on suitable/potential sites for the installation of hydrokinetic river turbines for rural electrification. Similarly, a lack of innovation due to the low level of research makes it impossible to develop local prototypes for tests and validation.
4.2. Future Prospects
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Concept | Cost (US $) |
---|---|
SMART free stream turbine generator, structure against debris, anchor cables and 50 m of electric cable | 14,988.00 |
SMART electrical cabinet grid-connected system inverter, controller, dump load and fuse box | 3912.00 |
Total equipment | 18,900.00 |
7% industrial profit | 1323.00 |
Import taxes | 2000.00 |
Total initial investment, Io | 22,223.00 |
Annual maintenance | 250.00 |
Average electricity price per kWh (USA/Brazil) | 0.132/0.121 |
Annual electricity price per household (USA/Brazil) | 1414.40/317.00 |
Discount rate (USA/Brazil) | 2%/10% |
Country | Hydropower Category | Operational (MW) * | Under Development (MW) * | Potential Site (MW) * |
---|---|---|---|---|
South Africa | Pico | 0.05 | 0.1 | 0.002 |
Micro | 2.3 | 0.4 | 0.47 | |
Zimbabwe | Pico | 0.03 | - | - |
Micro | 0.33 | - | - | |
Lesotho | Pico | - | - | - |
Micro | 0.2 | - | - | |
Malawi | Pico | 0.01 | - | - |
Micro | 0.1 | - | - | |
Swaziland | Pico | - | - | - |
Micro | - | - | 4.0 | |
Mozambique | Pico | 0.1 | - | - |
Micro | 0.4 | 0.02 | - |
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Awandu, W.; Ruff, R.; Wiesemann, J.-U.; Lehmann, B. Status of Micro-Hydrokinetic River Technology Turbines Application for Rural Electrification in Africa. Energies 2022, 15, 9004. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15239004
Awandu W, Ruff R, Wiesemann J-U, Lehmann B. Status of Micro-Hydrokinetic River Technology Turbines Application for Rural Electrification in Africa. Energies. 2022; 15(23):9004. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15239004
Chicago/Turabian StyleAwandu, Willis, Robin Ruff, Jens-Uwe Wiesemann, and Boris Lehmann. 2022. "Status of Micro-Hydrokinetic River Technology Turbines Application for Rural Electrification in Africa" Energies 15, no. 23: 9004. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15239004