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Solar panels at Strathmore University. Courtesy
By Annie Njanja
In Summary
- The photovoltaic systems have been installed on rooftops at Madaraka Campus.
- They generate up 75 per cent of what Strathmore University needs.
- The university is looking to cut its monthly bill which stands at Sh2.3 million.
- The project began in October last year and took Quests three months to install the system.
As the cost of electricity keeps rising in Kenya,
more companies and colleges are turning to cheaper energy. Strathmore
University has joined Williamsons Tea Factory which produces its own one
megawatt (MW) and UNEP Headquarters which produces 500 kilowatts, by
investing in an innovative solar power technology that is currently
feeding 75 per cent of its power demands.
The 0.6MW solar photovoltaic system tied to the national
power grid started lighting up the university last month. The
photovoltaic system is installed on the roof top of its Nairobi Madaraka
Campus.
Occupying six buildings at the campus, the green
energy project consists of 2,400 solar panels, 1,200 optimisers and 30
inverters and has a life-span of over 20 years.
Instead of setting up a solar farm, Williamsons Tea
Factory and Strathmore opted for roof-top systems, best suited in areas
where space is scarce and vertical development is the only option.
“The university’s monthly bill of Sh2.3 million is
now a thing of the past. Installing the system will save the institution
a lot of resources in years to come,” said Prof Izael da Silva, a
renewable energy specialist and director of Centre of Excellence in
Renewable Energy and Sustainable Development in Strathmore.
The system is integrated with a monitoring software
that gives real-time feeds on the performance of every solar panel. For
instance, using the software, the team has determined that the daily
power production of the system is 2.2 to 2.8 megawatt hours.
Besides, with the help of the software, supervisors
monitor the entire system at panel level and can tell when one fails,
or when it is not at par with the rest.
“People managing the project are able to login and
monitor power produced by each panel on a real-time basis, allowing any
potential problems to be spotted and arrested immediately,” said
engineer Raul Figueroa, executive director Quests, a real estate project
management consulting company in Kenya.
The software is also designed to trigger an alarm
that directs engineers to a dysfunctional panel (s). “We engineers are
able to find out about panels that are producing less power from our
phones or computers,” said Mr Figueroa.
The project began in October last year and took Quests three months to install the system.
However, the downside to the system is that it does
not any have storage capacity for night-time usage. This is largely due
to the high purchase and maintenance cost of storage equipment. Lack of
a power back-up means that the institution uses power generated
directly.
Although reliance on Kenya Power is reduced to the
bare minimum during day time, when darkness sets in the campus has to
depend on the national distributor for electricity.
“Kenya Power may offer very low prices for solar
energy fed to the grid, but it is inevitable to sell excess solar energy
to the national grid especially during day time,” said Prof Da Silva.
Kenya Power buys the power fed to the grid at 12
cents per kilowatt hour or unit. “The price can be justified because
they incur production, operations and transmission costs,” he said.
Strathmore University managed to get financing for
the project from French Development to the tune of $1.3 million (Sh114
million), with a payback time of six years. Such a solar photovoltaic
system is ideal for institutions, like schools and hospitals, whose
power consumption levels are very high.
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