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MINISTRY OF NEW AND RENEWABLE ENERGYCENTRE FOR WIND ENERGY TECHNOLOGY
Presented byR. Sasi Kumar
Scientist, SRRA, C-WET
E-mail: [email protected]
National Solar Energy Summit-2012
DSIIDC,New Delhi (13-14/12/2012)
Renewable Energy in India
� Wind energy occupies first with an installed capacity of about 18
GW as in November 2012.
Ranked 5th in worldwide wind installation capacity.� Ranked 5th in worldwide wind installation capacity.
� MNRE/CWET has carried out dedicated wind resource assessment
about 700 locations covering the entire country.
� Indian Wind Atlas has been published by MNRE/CWET in
collaboration with RISO,Denmark.
Solar Energy-JNNSM
� Solar Energy has great potential in India as future source of energy.
� India is a tropical country endowed with vast solar energy potential.
� Government of India initiated Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission
(JNNSM) program in 2009 to provide ecologically sustainable growth.
� Major objective of JNNSM is to establish India as a global leader in Solar
Energy.
JNNSM Highlights
• Create favorable condition for solar manufacturing capability.
� Promote off grid/decentralized application of solar energy therebyempowering the people at grass root level.
� Technological innovations(R&D) to drive down costs towards gridparity.
� Create conditions through rapid scale up of capacity.� Create conditions through rapid scale up of capacity.
• R&D
• Detailed mapping of ground solar insolation particularly in highpotential solar regions.
• Establishment of dedicated Solar Radiation Resource Assessment(SRRA) stations to assess and quantify the ground level data onsolar radiation.
• Data processing , modeling and making of Solar Maps.
Application
segment
Target for
Phase I
(2010-13)
Target for
Phase 2
(2013-17)
Target for
Phase 3
(2017-22)
Solar collectors 7 million
sq. meter
15 million
sq. meter
20 Million
sq. meter
JNNSM..
sq. meter sq. meter sq. meter
Off grid solar
application
200 MW 1000 MW 2000 MW
Utility grid power,
including roof top
1000-2000 MW 4000-10000 MW 20000 MW
Why Measurements…?
•Ground measured data is more accurate but costly.
•Quantification of the ground data.
•A combination of measured and satellite data helps in better•A combination of measured and satellite data helps in betterunderstanding solar potential areas .
• For preparation of accurate and reliable SOLMAPS
•Design & Performance Parameters
•To determine the bankability of the proposals
Solar irradiation data availability
• Information on Solar Radiation over India is provided by the wellreceived and widely utilized two volumes “Handbook of SolarRadiation Data for India” and “Solar Radiation over India”.
• First volume contains the results of measured values maintained byIndia Meteorological Department (IMD) and the second one givesderived values based on various meteorological parameters.derived values based on various meteorological parameters.
• MNRE in 2003 updated the “Handbook of Solar Radiation Data forIndia” with the latest data for the period 1986-2000.
• Purpose of these volumes were to provide a database for thedesigners of systems for harnessing the solar energy received at aplace.
• Very limited measured solar radiation data(by IMD) is available forthe country.
• Other sources are SEC-NREL data and satellite data(NASA,METEONORM,SOLEMI)
IMD -Solar Radiation measuring network.
Figure 2 Spatial Distribution of Solar Radiation Monitoring Stations in the Existing Network of IMD
SRRA Implementation
• Under JNNSM (R&D), SRRA Program was sponsored by MNRE in
2011 and implemented by C-WET, Chennai .
• An exclusive SRRA unit has been established at C-WET.
• 51 SRRA stations in 10 States and 1 Union Territory have been
established between May 2011 to October, 2011.
• A Central Receiving Station (CRS) has been established at C-WET.
• Data from all SRRA stations are transmitted through GPRS to the
• CRS at C-WET.
Site selection criteria
• Area availability for future development.
• Free horizon.
• Strong network connectivity.
• Safety & Security.
• Electromagnetic interference.
• Easy accessibility to site.
SRRA Stations- state wise
Sl.No
State/UT Number of stationsestablished
1 Tamil Nadu 7
2 Karnataka 6
3 Andhra Pradesh 5
4 Maharashtra 34 Maharashtra 3
5 Madhya Pradesh 3
6 Chhattisgarh 1
7 Gujarat 11
8 Rajasthan 12
9 Haryana 1
10 Jammu & Kashmir 1
11 Puducherry 1
Total 51
Sl.No Station Name State Latitude(N) Longitude(E)
1 Karaikudi Tamilnadu 10º04' 11'' 78º46' 48''
2 Kayathar Tamilnadu 8º56' 48'' 77º46' 16''
3 Chennai(CWET) Tamilnadu 12º57' 23'' 80º12' 15''4 Ramanathapuram Tamilnadu 10º59' 23'' 76º59' 4''
5 Vellore Tamilnadu 12º58'26'' 79º9'32''
6 Trichy Tamilnadu 10º45'47'' 78º49'0''
7 Erode Tamilnadu 11º16'12'' 77º36'29''
SRRA Stations
7 Erode Tamilnadu 11º16'12'' 77º36'29''
8 Puducherry Puducherry 11º57'35'' 79º48'38''
9 Phalodi Rajasthan 26º43'40'' 73º55'17'
10 Bagora Rajasthan 25º12'59' 72º1'12''
11 Kota Rajasthan 25º9'38'' 75º51'31''
12 Sirohi Rajasthan 24º53'12'' 72º50' 51''
13 Amarsagar (Jaisalmer) Rajasthan 26º55'1'' 70º54''
14 Balotra Rajasthan 25º49'51'' 72º14'24''
15 Bodana Rajasthan 28º1'11'' 73º19'0''
16 Ratangarh (Churu) Rajasthan 28º4'47'' 74º37'6''
17 Jodhpur(IIT) Rajasthan 26º15' 24'' 73º1' 0''
18 Pokhran Rajasthan 26º55'1'' 70º54'0’’
19 Mathania Rajasthan 26º31'47'' 72º58'27''
20 Ajmer Rajasthan 26º27'0'' 74º38'2''
21 Bilaspur Chhattisgarh 22º4‘30'' 82º11’3''
22 Shegaon Maharashtra 20 046’47” 76º40'45''
23 Karad Maharashtra 17º18'34'' 74º11'10''
24 Pandharpur Maharashtra 17º39'19' 75º22'9''
25 Jambua Gujarat 22º18'26'' 73º10'51''
26 Bhogat Gujarat 21º59'32'' 69º14'29''
27 Santalpur Gujarat 23º45'47'' 71º10'0''
28 Keshod Gujarat 21º18'59'' 70º16'0''
SRRA stations continued…
29 Sadodar Gujarat 22º03'06'' 70º14'0''
30 Gandhi Nagar Gujarat 23º9'17'' 72º40'0''
31 Kothada Pitha Gujarat 21056’51” 71012’34”
32 Idar Gujarat 23º49‘47'' 73º0‘10''
33 Tharad Gujarat 24º22‘38'' 71º37‘47''
34 Chandrodi Gujarat 23º20‘2'' 70º38‘14''
35 Vartej Gujarat 21º44'50'' 72º04'33''
36 Leh Jammu &Kashmir 34º08' 24'' 77º28' 50''
37 Bellary Karnataka 14º54' 14'' 75º59' 27''
38 Chitradurga Karnataka 14º12' 56'' 76º25' 40''
39 Gulbarga Karnataka 17º19' 10'' 76º51' 16''
40 Belgaum Karnataka 16º25' 7'' 74º47' 35''
41 Bijapur Karnataka 16º50' 49'' 75º45' 3''
42 Rajgarh Madhya Pradesh 23º59' 12'' 76º43' 38''
43 Neemuch Madhya Pradesh 24º28' 43'' 74º52' 11''
SRRA stations cont’d…….
44 Mandsaur Madhya Pradesh 24º4' 25'' 75º1' 49''
45 Gurgaon (SEC) Haryana 28º25’31'' 77º09’18''
46 Medak Andhra Pradesh 18º2' 27'' 78º15' 58''
47 Kadiri Andhra Pradesh 14º06'29'' 78º08'54''
48 Guruzala Andhra Pradesh 16º33'29'' 79º38'15''
49 Tirupathi Andhra Pradesh 13º37'46'' 79º24'1''
50 RajahmundryAndhra Pradesh 17º0'0'' 81º48'14''
51 ChilakapalemAndhra Pradesh 18º18'0'' 83º54'0''
Sl No. Instrument Manufacturer Parameter /useA. Solar Measuring Instruments
1 Pyranometer Eppley Laboratory, USA Global Solar Radiation (W/m2)
2 Shaded Pyranometer -do- Diffuse Solar Radiation (W/m2)
3 Pyrheliometer -do- Direct Irradiance (W/m2)
4 Solar Tracker Geonica , Spain For tracking Sun
B. Meteorological Measuring Instruments
5 Ultrasonic Wind Sensor R M Young, USA Wind Speed (m/s) and Wind Direction (Deg)
Instruments at SRRA Stations
5 Ultrasonic Wind Sensor R M Young, USA Wind Speed (m/s) and Wind Direction (Deg)
6 Rain Gauge -do- Rain Accumulation (mm)
7 Pressure sensor -do- Atmospheric Pressure (mb)
8 Temperature &Relative Humidity sensor
-do- Temperature(C) and Humidity(%)
C. General Instruments
9 GPS Garmin, USA To synchronize Sun Tracker with Sun movement
10 Data logger & Modem Geonica ,Spain For collection of sensor outputs, storing ,averaging andtransferring it to Central Receiving Station(CRS) at C WET,Chennai using SIM
11 GPRS Garmin, USA To transmit data through mobile SIM cards to CRS at CWET, Chennai
12 Solar PV Panel Moserbaer, India For charging battery for powering SRRA stations.
13 External Battery Exide, India For the electrical storage of SPV power.
Besides these, data on Solar elevation angle, Solar azimuth angles, battery voltage etc are also being received inCentral Server at CWET, Chennai
CWET SRRA Station
Servers are installed comprising of Primary, Secondary and Web server which receives datafrom all SRRA stations . Data sampling @ 1 second & averaging to 1 minute is received inServer 1. Server 2 is installed for quality assessment activities .13/12/2012
Server 2Server 1SRRA Screen Shot
� Data sampling and averaging- one second & one minuterespectively and transmitted to the CRS through GPRS.
� Data is being stored at multi location, processed andanalyzed regularly.
SRRA Data
analyzed regularly.
� Solar Data Policy is released and available in CWET web site.
Availability of SRRA Data
• Previous month’s average data for all stations are available on C-WET
Web Site (interactive map) and sample data in PDF for CWET SRRA
station is available on www.cwet.res.in
• Quality Controlled ASCII data and report in PDF format (Daily, Monthly
and Yearly) are available on payment basis.
• SRRA data sold either through CD /e-mail.
Solar Data Policy 2012
� MNRE, sole and exclusive owner of data.
� Only quality controlled data will be sold.
� C-WET is authorised to sell data. NDA to be executed.
� Data for more than 5 sites (bulk buyer) at a time - requires� Data for more than 5 sites (bulk buyer) at a time - requires
Ministry’s approval
� Publication of data- requires specific MNRE/C-WET permission.
� Special approval from MNRE is required for supply data to foreign
nationals/institutions.
� Details of pricing is available on www.cwet.res.in
Data Collection & QC
Sampling period Averaging period Duration
10 sec 10 min Up to Nov 2011
1 sec 10 min Up to August 2012
1 sec 1 min From August 2012 till date1 sec 1 min From August 2012 till date
For solar radiation parameters, the applied quality control is based on BaselineSurface Radiation Network (BSRN) rules by the World MeteorologicalOrganisation(WMO).
Details of Data Reports
Product Data QC information
Amount (Rs)
Commercial Non commercial
Daily 1 minute time stamp Flaggedinformation
200 100
Monthly 1 minute time stamp Flagged 5,000 2,500Monthly 1 minute time stamp on daily basis
Flaggedinformation
5,000 2,500
Yearly 1 minute time stamp on daily and monthly basis
Flaggedinformation
50,000 25,000
Monthly Report(PDF)
Monthly and daily average
Information Details *
2,000 2,000
* Graphs, Solar Radiation and meteorological parameters, QC testreports and figures and wind rose
Name of the SRRA Station Type and Period of Data
M/s. Kanoria Chemicals Limited, New Delhi
Phalodi (Rajasthan) One Day - 16.05.2012ASCII Data
One Day - 12.05.2012ASCII Data
M/s. ACME Tele Power Limited, Gurgaon
Neemuch, Mansdaur& Rajgarh (Madhya Pradesh)
1 year monthly and daily average data [PDF]Neemuch & Rajgarh [Oct.2011 – Sep.2012]Mansaur[Sep.2011 - Aug.2012]
Data on commercial mode
M/s. Lanco Solar Energy Pvt Ltd, Gurgaon
Bodana &Phalodi (Rajasthan) 1 year monthly and daily average data [PDF]Bodana [July 2011- July 2012]Phalodi [July 2011- July 2012]
M/s Gamesa Wind Turbines Pvt.Ltd. Chennai, Kayathar, Tricy, Erode, Vellore(Tamil Nadu)
ASCII data[Since Feb 2012]
M/s Rasi Green Earth Energy Pvt.Ltd. Vellore(Tamil Nadu)
One year ASCII data[August 2011-July 2012]
Maintenance Issues
� Station upkeep issues
� GPRS network connectivity.
� Damages of sensors by birds/animals at SRRA locations.
� Theft /damages of equipments at locations.
Issues…..
Maximum outages have been observed with the
damage to the transducer of ultrasonic wind
sensor.(pix from CWET,Chennai)
Issues……
One of the damaged transducers of
ultrasonic anemometer despite having
bird guards (spikes)
(Pix from Gulbarga-Karnataka)
Users of SRRA Data
� Solar Power Plant Developers/Stake holders
� Satellite Data Providers for Ground truthing.
� Academic/Researcher
� Policy Makers.
� Consultants.
Institutional collaboration
� Under Indo German Cooperation Collaboration with GIZ, Germany
for data processing, quality assessment and developing solar maps
of India.
� With IMD, Solar Radiation Calibration Data Sharing and Multi-
locational Storage Systems.
� Satellite data from Space Application Centre, ISRO,Ahmedabad for
the preparation of solar maps of India.
Industrial requirements
� High quality solar radiation data for solar developers for bankablepropositions, design and performance parameters.
� Calibration of solar radiation sensors.
� Consultancy.
Calibration Laboratory
• A calibration Laboratory has been established at C-WET.
• The calibration laboratory is having two numbers of AbsoluteCavity Radiometer, four numbers of Standard PrecisionPyranometer and a Solar Tracker.
• These equipments will be used for inter-comparison andcalibration of the sensors used at the field stations.
Future Plans
• Setting up of 60 more SRRA stations as part of the expansionprogram of SRRA project to cover unrepresented states/UTs and alsounrepresented regions of presently represented states.
• Aerosol measurements at 4 SRRA stations.
• Calibration of solar sensors.
• Upgradation and integration of 45 IMD solar radiation measuringstations.
• Consultancy projects.
Sl.No State/UT
Number of Stations
Phase I Phase II Total
1 Andhra Pradesh 6 3 9
2 Bihar - 3 3
3 Chhattisgarh 1 1 2
4 Gujarat 11 2 13
5 Haryana 1 1 2
6 Himachal Pradesh - 2 2
7 Jammu & Kashmir 1 1 2
8 Jharkhand - 2 2
9 Karnataka 5 1 6
10 Kerala - 2 2
11 Madhya Pradesh 3 5 8
12 Maharashtra 3 6 9
Sl.No State/UT
Number of Stations
Phase I Phase II Total
13 Odisha - 4 4
14 Punjab - 2 2
15 Rajasthan 12 - 12
16 Tamil Nadu 7 - 7 16 Tamil Nadu 7 - 7
17 Uttar Pradesh - 5 5
18 Uttarakhand - 2 2
19 West Bengal - 3 3
20 North East - 10 10
21 Union Territories 1 5 6
Total 51 60 111