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There is a silent revolution going on in Pakistan: the rooftop solar energy revolution.

ghazi52

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There is a silent revolution going on in Pakistan: the rooftop solar energy revolution.

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As per official import numbers, Pakistan imported more than 950 megawatts (MW) of solar power capacity in the last financial year, more than in the last four years combined.

Since the contribution of solar energy to the grid is still scaling up, the bulk of the imported solar panels have been installed on rooftops. If the trend continues, the country might add up to 5,000MW of rooftop solar panels by 2022 — a no mean achievement.

The chief reason for this sudden increase in solar rooftop installation is the extraordinarily poor performance of power distribution companies (Discos) coupled with a drastic reduction in solar panel prices. With the country still suffering blackouts of six hours or more a day, rooftop solar power now provides a viable solution to become entirely independent of the national grid to both urban and semi-urban consumers.

The drop in prices is another reason: five years ago, the cost of the same rooftop solar was five times more than what it is today. Plus, the marginal efficiencies of solar panels have also improved, so that more output can now be generated thus reducing costs per unit.

A positive role has also been played by the government, which is now pushing for more solar energy with friendlier net metering rules and improved regulatory regime.

The connection and regulatory approvals for net metering previously required six months to complete but now only takes a maximum of one month — giving solar installers more agility to close in on new connections and save time and operational costs.

Today, it is estimated that most of the growth in the rooftop segment is driven by commercial and industrial users, largely because the economics has started favouring them.

For instance, if a mall purchases power from the grid at Rs12-14 per unit for its consumption which is spread over 24 hours, a solar rooftop solution can instantly cut the net tariff in half — thereby helping them to hedge a long-term power tariff.

There is another advantage for industrial and commercial consumers with solar power — the energy is available when they need it the most — during daytime — which results in significant cost savings for their operations.


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Besides the above-mentioned consumers, educational institutes such as colleges and universities could come in next as potential players in the market. Think of these institutions which have expansive, flat-topped buildings and large campuses ideal for installing solar panels.

Some of the far flung, public and private schools, colleges and universities are not connected to the grid or experience intermittent power and for them, this is an ideal time to install solar panels.

Urban educational institutes obviously come with a net metering advantage and have become excellent candidates for rooftop solar plants. Many of these institutions have acres of roofs, but assuming conservatively that only 200 kW of solar gets installed on average on these premises, there is scope for additional installation of 5,000MW across the country.

The problem up till now was understandable. You put up a solar plant on the roof of a university for self-consumption of power, but what will they do with the electricity produced on holidays, or during summer or winter vacations?

Previously, zero gain on weekends and two to three months of summer vacations would make solar economics go for a toss. Not anymore. Net metering provides an ideal opportunity to sell power back to the grid in summer and over the weekends and supplying to the grid at a tariff of Rs 10-12 per unit.

What once did not make any commercial sense is now solely lucrative on economic grounds.

With rooftop solar dominating, net metering has become even more critical today and is sprouting different business models such as the ‘opex model’ where the roof owner does not own the solar plant. The solar is owned by a third party who invests in the plant and sells power, typically, to the roof owner.

Since the rooftop solar plant owner is a power company and there is an incentive to sell electricity back to the grid through net metering, every unit of electricity generation matters. The roof owner is happy because he gets a fixed long-term tariff without undertaking any upfront investments — and hedges himself against rising power tariffs (think of all the surcharges).


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The third-party owner of the solar panel is happy because his internal rate of return (IRR) of selling the power back to the grid and opex revenues from his customer is higher than his cost of capital. And last, the government is happy because the grid is now more stable owing to all the excess power being supplied to surrounding neighbourhoods instead of burning additional electricity.

As always, there are certain challenges. Pakistan’s power distribution companies aren’t keen on promoting rooftop solar power as that could hurt their finances.

All Pakistani Discos are owned by the government and have net accumulated losses on their balance sheets. With circular debt adding up their liquidity woes, they might see net metering as a potential threat where good paying consumers leave them for independent generation.

There are technological challenges, too, but they could be easily overcome. For instance, not many Discos have the technical capability to adjust to power fluctuations. During the day, there’ll be adjustments to accommodate sudden spikes of generation; in the evenings, there’ll be a reverse flow which makes the power variability and intermittency come in a much larger way.

There is another concern of the government’s stranded costs of assets that it has procured on stringent ‘take or pay’ terms.

With another 20,000MW due to come on line in the next three years, the government might fear the silent net metering revolution can make existing assets redundant in the long run. This can happen if consumers choose to opt out of the national grid and join the greener club, which will make the existing tariffs even steeper for consumers who are paying for the grid in the first place.

But even when stranded costs are high, this revolution must never be thwarted and stopped. Fortunately, the government has shown a long-term vision and far sightedness by simplifying net metering rules and encouraging Discos to adapt to the changing times.


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Is Pakistan's solar power poised to take off amid energy crisis?

Solar energy production in Pakistan is poised to take off ─ just as the South Asian country is ramping up coal production to help plug a crippling power crisis, energy experts say.

New high quality solar maps ─ essential to securing financing for major solar projects ─ show Pakistan is one of the world's best countries for producing solar energy because of its arid climate and latitude.

"Pakistan's solar potential is huge," said Jamil Masud, an energy expert who helped draft Pakistan's national renewable energy policy.

"The government is waking up to its potential," said Masud, a director of Hagler Bailly Pakistan, an energy and environmental consulting firm in Islamabad.

"With the prices of (photovoltaic panels) falling drastically in the last four years, the switch-over to renewables will happen ─ gradually."

Pakistan's current national power shortfall is estimated to be more than 6,000 megawatts, causing long power outages across the country.

Pakistan is building nearly a dozen coal power plants over the next 15 years with Chinese investment, as part of its attempts to end the crisis.

But Pakistan also has a range of major solar projects in the pipeline, amounting to more than 4,400 megawatts in potential power, said Amjad Awan, chief executive officer of the government's Alternative Energy Development Board (AEDB), an autonomous body working under the Ministry of Water and Power.

Until now, the country's lack of detailed solar maps ─ needed by major investors, especially US companies ─ has held back development of renewable energy, said Ali Habib, managing partner of Shama Solar, a company based in Lahore.

That changed in March, when Pakistan became one of the few developing countries to produce the maps.

They were developed by the AEDB and World Bank, drawing on data from nine solar data stations and 12 wind masts installed across the country.

"This is credible data according to which banks can give funding to potential projects," said Awan. "The government can now do the appropriate zoning and develop solar and wind areas."

'Better than Germany'

The solar maps highlight which regions are most suitable for solar power generation. Balochistan ─ a desert area with little cloud cover or air pollution ─ has the country's largest solar potential, they show.

"The maps reveal that even areas... receiving the least average annual irradiation are better than Germany's best regions for solar power generation," said Masud.

Germany is a world leader in producing solar energy, and uses detailed solar maps to assess its own solar resources.

Pakistan's data has been made public as part of the Global Solar Atlas website, giving commercial scale projects ready-to-use seasonal and monthly data.

This means investors do not have to spend significant time and money gathering data for their projects. Instead, "they can instantaneously acquire certified data of 'bankable' quality that should be acceptable to commercial financing institutions", said Masud.

That can substantially lower the costs around projects, which in turn encourages companies to set up large-scale solar power facilities, he said.

Solar 'already taking off'

Frustrated with constant power cuts, consumers are already installing small-scale roof-top solar systems for their homes and businesses.

"Solar is already taking off in Pakistan ─ it's going to challenge grid-connected power," said Fariel Salahuddin, an energy specialist based in Karachi.

"Roof-top solar panels are growing organically and as for the grid-connected solar projects, lots of pieces are coming together like regulation, tariffs, investments and grid capacity," she added.

Pakistan's National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) has issued guidelines for net metering so consumers can now sell excess solar energy they produce back to the grid, Salahuddin said.

One of the first licenses for net metering was issued to Pakistan's parliament building in Islamabad, which switched to solar energy last year.

Some banks have started financing home solar systems, which are cropping up across the country.

The Islamabad Electric Supply Company has introduced net metering, and other power companies in large cities such as Lahore and Karachi will be following suit "in a matter of months, not years" said AEDB's Awan.

However, the government still needs to simplify connection rules and procedures for small-scale solar power to be more widely adopted, Masud said.

"There are several procedural and commercial details to be worked out before rooftop photovoltaic panels become a common sight in Pakistan, but it's only a matter of time before it does," said Masud.

Pakistan already has one major solar park ─ the Quaid-e-Azam Solar Park in Bahawalpur, built with Chinese investment. It produces 400 megawatts with plans to rise to 1,500 megawatts of solar production.

"Not just the Chinese, but many other companies from countries like Germany and the United States are coming into Pakistan to invest in solar energy," said Vaqar Zakaria, the chief executive officer of Haigler Bailly Pakistan.

"However, the support and incentives being offered for coal-based power generation are far more attractive than those being offered for investment in solar power," added Zakaria.

Coal burning

However, despite its considerable solar and wind potential and the rapidly decreasing costs of renewable energy, Pakistan continues to focus on building its coal-powered generating capacity.

The government plans to add 10,000 megawatts of coal energy to the country's energy mix by 2020.

"Solar and wind have their limitations. Solar can't produce electricity at night," said Shama Solar's Habib.

"Every country needs a base load that can run all the time ─ and that still comes from coal and gas or oil."

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Pakistan’s northern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province plans to supply solar power to 5,800 off-grid households in 200 villages, promoting clean energy amid conventional electricity shortages.

The provincial government has earmarked 400 million rupees ($3.94 million) for the nine-month solar project, which will equip up to 29 households in each village.


The scheme is part of the Green Growth Initiative launched a year ago in Peshawar by former international cricket star Imran Khan, who is chairman of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, which governs the province.

The initiative aims to boost economic development in a way that uses natural resources sustainably, by increasing uptake of clean energy and forest cover, for example.

The provincial government plans to hook up at least 10 per cent of the 40 per cent of the province that is off-grid in the next three years with solar power and small-scale hydroelectric plants, said Atif Khan, provincial minister for education, energy and power.

It is already setting up micro-hydro plants - which harness running water and do not require dams - in the mountainous north of the province, while off-grid households in the south will be provided with solar energy.

The government will pay 90 per cent of the cost of the solar equipment, with the rest shouldered by households.

Families will receive a 200-watt solar panel, two batteries and other accessories to run a ceiling fan, a pedestal fan, three LED lights, and two mobile phone charging slots.


 
I have many articles and post on solar energy about 10 years ago.
One member Zaki, used to spread misinformation... i know simply because he hated Pakistan.
I repeat again, with Solar energy biggest beneficiary is always state, if i'm policy maker, i'll announce subsidy in solar panels. So that every single Pakistani have it's own solar power source, and do the job of state for free all his life. Isn't is this clever!
State would not only save in labor cost but also infrastructure cost, which amounts to $ billions annually.
While in Pakistan only Punjab pay utility bills, while all over Sindh, Baluchistan and NWFP there's culture of electricity stealing.
I also heard these 3 provinces don't even pay property tax, which is also very very high in Punjab. I'm not going to mention smuggling trade, patronized by provincial govts.
 
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Still quite expensive......... If Govt can do some thing about price (only up to 5KV ) then we can see a real revolution ,,,,,,, But that will put wapda out of business ......... because 50% house holds in Pakistan only go up to 5KV (people using 3Kv generators or even less capacity UPS)
 
That means a 'damagh' has started to appear in the khopa!
 
Still quite expensive......... If Govt can do some thing about price (only up to 5KV ) then we can see a real revolution ,,,,,,, But that will put wapda out of business ......... because 50% house holds in Pakistan only go up to 5KV (people using 3Kv generators or even less capacity UPS)

Perhaps you meant 5kVA!
Why solar power was not allowed in Past.. was simply a matter of corruption and conspiracy against Pakistan.
Yousaf Reza Gilani & Feriyal Talpur and the tribe earned $billions by importing duty free generators and selling them in market openly.
Pakistan can never flourish because of Zardari and tribe.
Just to let you know Zardari had orders to discourage use of solar panels by imposing official extortion aka solar tax and vandalism.
 
Perhaps you meant 5kVA!
Why solar power was not allowed in Past.. was simply a matter of corruption and conspiracy against Pakistan.
Yousaf Reza Gilani & Feriyal Talpur and the tribe earned $billions by importing duty free generators and selling them in market openly.
Pakistan can never flourish because of Zardari and tribe.
Just to let you know Zardari had orders to discourage use of solar panels by imposing official extortion aka solar tax and vandalism.
And as I said , If Govt bring down prices at least 50% of users will shift to solar , that will put Wapda(Biggest revenue generator for Govt) out of business .......
Expensive solar is in favour of Govt .................................

That means a 'damagh' has started to appear in the khopa!
Just need a will bro , there are 1000s way,,,,,,,,,,,,,, What if Govt bring down solar prices and shift as many houses on solar so Wapda can provide electricity to Industries.
 
Yes I have to say, I have noticed solar panels going up all over the place in pindi during my last trip.
 
And as I said , If Govt bring down prices at least 50% of users will shift to solar , that will put Wapda(Biggest revenue generator for Govt) out of business .......

No one will be out of business.... there will be private companies, competing with each other.
Employing people but operating with far greater efficiency.
WAPDA just like any other civilian controlled institution, operates worst than any worst of African nation supply company.
I remember once there was a brief power failure in UAE around 5 years back, and they fired 50% of organization, restructured and re-started. Pakistanis can't even dream of such service quality, even in their wildest dreams.
In rare cases, when power line deliver you electricity, it deliver you shit in the name of electricity, which is leading to component failure.
WAPDA people has no clue how to run the operations and maintenance. There's zero quality all around. There are 1% knowledgeable people but rest of all is litter.
 
Pakistan govt will never support domestic solar energy.
They get money when UPS is charging your batteries by consuming high energy.
They get money when your generator runs on hyper taxed fuels.

They have zero care for you. You are just slaves.
 
Solar is great... especially small scale applications in Pakistan. All energy resources should be exploited. Coal, hydro, solar, oil, gas, biomass and wind. We can achieve 1st world levels of per capita energy consumption if we do so.
 

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