An Environmentally-Friendly Tourist Village in Egypt Based on a Hybrid Renewable Energy System––Part One: What Is the Optimum City?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Data Collection
2.1. Load Profile
2.2. Solar Energy Resource
2.3. Wind Energy Resource
2.4. Temperature Resource
- , PV derating factor;
- , solar radiation incident on the PV module at the current time (kW/m2);
- , solar radiation at standard test conditions (1 kW/m2);
- , power output of the PV module under standard test conditions (kW);
- , temperature of the PV module at the current time (°C);
- , temperature of the PV module under standard test conditions (25 °C);
- , temperature coefficient of the PV module (%/°C).
3. Hybrid System Modeling
Component | Capital Cost | Replacement Cost | O & M Cost | Life Time |
---|---|---|---|---|
PV module | $3000/kW | $2500/kW | $10/year | 20 years |
Wind turbine | $4000/kW | $3000/kW | $50/year | 20 years |
Power converter | $800/kW | $600/kW | $5/year | 15 years |
Battery | $300/kWh | $250/kWh | $10/year | 12,600 kWh |
Diesel generator | $400/kW | $300/kW | $0.25/hour | 15,000 h |
Technical Details | Value |
---|---|
Derating factor | 80% |
Ground reflection | 20% |
Converter efficiency | 90% |
Fuel cost | $0.24/L |
Annual nominal interest rate | 8% |
Project lifetime | 25 years |
4. Results and Discussions
4.1. Selection of the City According to the Economic Cost
- COE and NPC represent the levelized cost of energy and the total net present cost of the system without considering the effects of ambient temperature or applying GHG emission penalties.
- COE_T and NPC_T represent the levelized cost of energy and the total net present cost of the system with considering the effects of ambient temperature.
- COE_P and NPC_P represent the levelized cost of energy and the total net present cost of the system, taking GHG emission penalties into consideration.
- COE_P_T and NPC_P_T represent the levelized cost of energy and the total net present cost of the system, taking GHG emission penalties and the effects of ambient temperature into consideration.
4.1.1. Hybrid PV/Wind/Diesel/Battery System
4.1.2. Hybrid PV/Diesel/Battery System
4.1.3. Hybrid Wind/Diesel/Battery System
4.1.4. Diesel/Battery System
4.2. Selection the City According to the Amount of GHG Emitted
4.2.1. Hybrid PV/Wind/Diesel/Battery System
4.2.2. Hybrid PV/Diesel/Battery System
4.2.3. Hybrid Wind/Diesel/Battery System
4.2.4. Diesel/Battery System
5. Conclusions
- The selection of the optimum city from five touristic Egyptian cities (Luxor, Giza, Alexandria, Qena and Aswan) to establish an environmentally-friendly tourist village has been carried out according to the economic cost (COE and NPC) and the amount of GHG emitted.
- The selection of the optimum city has been carried out in four cases based on the effects of ambient temperature and applying GHG emission penalties for different configurations of HRES.
- Alexandria is the most economic city for a hybrid PV/wind/diesel/battery system in comparison with Aswan and Qena.
- Aswan is the economic city for a hybrid PV/diesel/battery system compared to the other two cities, Alexandria and Qena.
- Alexandria is the most economic city for a hybrid wind/diesel/battery system in comparison with Qena and Aswan.
- For diesel/battery, system there is no difference between the three cities according to the economic cost, but for the same city there is a significant difference according to the economic cost based on applying GHG emission penalties.
- There is no large difference in GHG amount emitted from a PV/wind/diesel/battery system in any of the three cities, ignoring the effects of ambient temperature and GHG emission penalties.
- Qena is the optimum city for a PV/wind/diesel/battery system according to the amount of GHG emitted in comparison with the other two cities, if the effects of ambient temperature are considered.
- Aswan is the optimum city for a PV/wind/diesel/battery system according to the amount of GHG emitted compared to the other two cities, if the GHG emission penalties are applied.
- Alexandria is the optimum city for a PV/wind/diesel/battery system according to the amount of GHG emitted compared to the other two cities if the effects of ambient temperature are considered and GHG emission penalties are applied.
- Alexandria is the optimum city for a PV/diesel/battery system according to the amount of GHG emitted compared to the other two cities if the effects of ambient temperature and GHG emission penalties are neglected, or applying GHG emission penalties.
- There is no large difference between Alexandria and Aswan for a PV/diesel/battery system according to the amount of GHG emitted if the effects of ambient temperature or both the effects of ambient temperature and GHG emission penalties are taken into consideration.
- Alexandria is the optimum city for a wind/diesel/battery system according to the amount of GHG emitted compared to the other two cities regardless of considering the effects of ambient temperature, applying GHG emission penalties or considering the effects of both.
- According to the amount of GHG emitted from a diesel/battery system, there is no difference between the three cities under the study.
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
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Diab, F.; Lan, H.; Zhang, L.; Ali, S. An Environmentally-Friendly Tourist Village in Egypt Based on a Hybrid Renewable Energy System––Part One: What Is the Optimum City? Energies 2015, 8, 6926-6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/en8076926
Diab F, Lan H, Zhang L, Ali S. An Environmentally-Friendly Tourist Village in Egypt Based on a Hybrid Renewable Energy System––Part One: What Is the Optimum City? Energies. 2015; 8(7):6926-6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/en8076926
Chicago/Turabian StyleDiab, Fahd, Hai Lan, Lijun Zhang, and Salwa Ali. 2015. "An Environmentally-Friendly Tourist Village in Egypt Based on a Hybrid Renewable Energy System––Part One: What Is the Optimum City?" Energies 8, no. 7: 6926-6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/en8076926
APA StyleDiab, F., Lan, H., Zhang, L., & Ali, S. (2015). An Environmentally-Friendly Tourist Village in Egypt Based on a Hybrid Renewable Energy System––Part One: What Is the Optimum City? Energies, 8(7), 6926-6944. https://doi.org/10.3390/en8076926