Study: Wind, Solar Can Fulfill 25 Percent of Oahu’s Power Needs

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When combined with on-O’ahu wind farms and solar energy, the Interisland Wind project, which planned to bring 400 megawatts (MW) of wind power from Molokaʻi and Lana’i to O’ahu, can reliably supply more than 25% of Oʻahu’s projected electricity demand, according to the Oʻahu Wind Integration Study (OWIS). The OWIS was conducted by the Hawaiʻi Natural Energy Institute (HNEI) at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, General Electric (GE) Company and the Hawaiian Electric Company (HECO).

For the purposes of the research project, the OWIS released today studied the impact on the Oʻahu grid of a total of 500 MW of wind energy and a nominal 100 MW of solar power, though a good deal more utility-scale and customer-sited solar power is expected on Oʻahu.

The study found that the 500 MW of wind and 100 MW of solar power could  eliminate the need to burn approximately 2.8 million barrels of low sulfur fuel oil (LSFO) and 132,000 tons of coal each year while maintaining system reliability, if a number of recommendations are incorporated, including:

  • Provide state-of-the-art wind power forecasting to help anticipate the amount of power that will be available from wind;
  • Increase power reserves (the amount of power that can be called upon from operating generators) to help manage wind variability and uncertainty in wind power forecasts;
  • Reduce minimum stable operating power of baseload generating units to provide more power reserves;
  • Increase ramp rates (the time it takes to increase or decrease output) of Hawaiian Electric’s thermal generating units;
  • Implement severe weather monitoring to ensure adequate power generation is available during periods of higher wind power variability;
  • Evaluate other resources capable of contributing reserve, such as fast-starting thermal generating units and load control programs.
  • The study notes that assuring reliability will require further studies, upgrades to existing and new infrastructure, as well as specific requirements on the wind farms to be connected to the O’ahu system. With these and other proposed changes, the technical analysis suggests, Oʻahu can accommodate increased wind and solar projects with minimal limits on output of renewable resources.

The National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), part of the U.S. Department of Energy (U.S. DOE), assembled a technical review committee with representatives of industry and academia which met throughout the project to review findings. NREL also contracted the private firm AWS Truepower to develop wind and solar power profiles that were used in the study.

“The findings of this study show it is feasible to integrate large-scale wind and solar projects on Oʻahu but also have value beyond Hawaiʻi. Both large mainland utilities and relatively small and/or isolated grids that wish to integrate significant amounts of renewable energy while maintaining reliability for their customers can learn from this study,” said Dr. Rick Rocheleau, HNEI director.

Projects such as this one that enable increased implementation of alternative energy sources are made possible by the efforts of U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye, Senate appropriations chair, to ensure that the Department of Energy is adequately resourced to make these critical investments in energy technology. Additional funding was provided by Hawaiian Electric Company.

“GE has been working closely with HNEI and HECO to assess innovative solutions to help Oʻahu meet its electricity demand with very high levels of renewable resources,” said Hamid Elahi, GE Energy Consulting general manager.  “GE is proud to be working closely with HECO and other forward-thinking utilities which are leading the industry in solving some of the most important challenges that face our grids.”

“To reach our renewable energy goals we need to use all the resources available to us. For O’ahu, this includes the utility-scale solar, roof-top solar, waste-to-energy and on-island wind that we are pursuing. But on-island resources are not enough to meet Oʻahu’s power needs,” said Robbie Alm, Hawaiian Electric executive vice president.

Adds Alm, “We know that more solar power is possible on Oʻahu than was studied by the OWIS. However, this baseline study is an essential first step for the Interisland Wind Project. It shows that the technology may present challenges but these can be overcome. The questions now are financing, environmental impact and whether the effected communities can live with the project with community benefits.”

The Oʻahu Wind Integration Study is now available on-line at www.hnei.hawaii.edu. More information on Hawaiian Electric’s progress in adding renewable energy can be found at www.heco.com.

More information:
At HNEI, UHM
Tara Hicks Johnson, 808-956-3151
hickst@hawaii.edu

At GE Energy:
Devon Manz, 518-385-3560
devon.manz@ge.com

At Hawaiian Electric:
Peter Rosegg, 808-543-7780
peter.rosegg@heco.com

Comments

comments

1 COMMENT

  1. And the net cost compared with fossil-fuel-power will be?

    If I pedal my exercise bike really hard, can I help out too?

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