International Journal of Photoenergy (Jan 2021)

A Technoeconomic Feasibility Analysis for Affordable Energy System in the East African Community Countries

  • Samuel Bimenyimana,
  • Chen Wang,
  • Godwin Norense Osarumwense Asemota,
  • Aphrodis Nduwamungu,
  • Cicilia Kemunto Mesa,
  • Jeanne Paula Ihirwe,
  • Jean De Dieu Niyonteze,
  • Shilpi Bora,
  • Chun-Ling Ho,
  • Noel Hagumimana,
  • Yiyi Mo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/9921940
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2021

Abstract

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Access to energy is among the key pillars to socioeconomic and improved life style. The East African Community (EAC) countries, also members of sub-Saharan Africa, are among countries with enough energy resources but still struggling with low electricity access, and the lower proportion of citizens with electricity access challenges such as expensive tariff, frequent blackouts, and unreliable service still persists. Diesel technology is among the easy and fast installation technologies for a location with an urgent need of electricity while solar is a clean technology with free fuel. Considering the diversity of electricity tariffs, cost of diesel fuel, and suitability to solar energy exploitation in EAC, this paper intends to provide a technoeconomic analysis for reliable, affordable, and sustainable energy system in the region. A daily load of 94.44 kWh recorded from averaging electricity bills of a luxury house in Kigali, Rwanda, is used as research object, and HOMER simulations are carried on considering the level of such daily load being supplied by either (a) diesel generator, (b) solar+diesel technology, (c) PV+battery storage, or (d) PV+battery storage+grid system in each member country of the EAC. The results show that (a) solar energy is a feasible and applicable technology for energy generation for the whole six EAC countries; (b) for South Sudan, if it is a standalone system, the diesel technology is less costly than solar technology; however, solar energy can still be recommended to be adopted as it has no gas emissions; (c) except South Sudan, PV+battery storage technology is found to be more affordable and cleaner than any technology including diesel; and (d) the option of connecting PV+battery storage to the grid is found more economical for locations where grid interaction is possible because their levelized electricity costs (LCOE) are lower than the real electricity tariffs currently in use within each of the six EAC countries. The solar energy system with battery storage (both off-grid and grid connected) proposed in this research can lead to an efficient increase of national energy resource exploitation in the EAC countries, resulting in reliable, affordable, and sustainable energy access to all the citizenry of the EAC.