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IMPACT OF PRACTICE-TO-POLICY DIALOGUE: NEPAL'S FIRST GRID INTERCONNECTED MICRO HYDRO PROJECT

2/16/2018

1 Comment

 
The ​11th of January 2018 was an eventful day for the Nepali micro hydropower community. On that day, the 23 kW Syaurebhumi micro hydro plant, in Nuwakot, got hooked up to the national grid. It became the first micro hydro plant (MHP) in the country to be interconnected, opening the door for other MHPs to follow. For Nepal, dotted with more than 3000 MHPs aggregating to about 35MW installed capacity, of which about 5MW is now un-utilized due to the arrival of the national grid, this interconnection pilot is an important step towards revitalizing defunct MHPs.
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Syaurebhumi MHP stream. Credit: AEPC-RERL
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Syaurebhumi community members. Credit: AEPC-RERL
The Journey to Grid Interconnection

The journey to the interconnection was neither simple nor short. The idea of connecting MHPs to the national grid is not new in Nepal, having been mooted as far back as 2006. By 2015, the Nepal Electricity Authority (NEA) and the Alternative Energy and Power Centre (AEPC) had agreed to the MHP grid interconnection in principle. NEA, which is the sole utility in Nepal, is responsible for the implementation of all grid based electrification under the Ministry of Energy, while the AEPC tends to renewable energy-off grid electrification under the Ministry of Population and Environment. So, the in-principle agreement of the two responsible agencies was a significant step in the direction of MHP grid interconnection. However, in spite of the in-principle agreement, matters moved forward slowly because ‘the reluctance of the NEA reflected in the directives of senior NEA management was not conducive for grid connection’, according to Jiwan Mallik, one of the individuals who worked closely on the interconnection effort. The reluctance was based on a number of question-marks concerning the technical robustness and safety of such an arrangement, as well as the managerial entanglements.  Although AEPC worked steadily to address these concerns, by first drawing up a ‘Micro Hydro Projects Interconnection Equipment Standards and Specifications’, and then performing a financial viability study for grid connection, a pilot was still not forthcoming.
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Syaurebhumi MHP pentock. Credit: AEPC-RERL
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Syaurebhumi MHP civilworks. Credit: AEPC-RERL
HPNET'S INTERMEDIARY ROLE
​
​A small but vital nudge that tipped the NEA policymakers in favour of MHP grid interconnection came in the form of HPNET’s Practice-to-Policy Exchange for Grid Interconnected Micro and Mini Hydropower in South and Southeast Asia workshop held in Sri Lanka, in January 2016. Hosted by pioneering organizations Janathakshan and Energy Forum in Sri Lanka, the workshop had been targeted at policymakers, utilities, and developers of eight countries. The Nepal contingent was drawn from all three sections.  This exchange was exactly what they needed. Within five weeks of the Sri Lanka workshop, the attendees held a follow-up workshop on the 4th of March in Lalitpur, in order to build on the confidence gained from the Sri Lankan evidence of the feasibility of grid interconnection.  In late March 2016, the NEA entered into a Power Purchase Agreement with two MHPs on a pilot basis. One of these was the Syaurebhumi MHP.
​The Syaurebhumi plant was a classic case of an off-grid MHP plant thwarted by the arrival of the national grid. It had been completed in 2013, but as the national grid arrived during its construction, and as the community opted to be serviced by the national grid, the plant lay idle. After the interconnection on the 11th of January, the plant was kept under observation for a period of 15 days.  The outcomes of the period were analysed by a Test Witness Committee comprising officials of both NEA and AEPC, and were found satisfactory. As of 1st of February, 2018, the Syaurebhumi MHP has started commercial operation. 
FINANCIAL VIABILITY
​
The costs to interconnect the Syaurebhumi MHP to the central grid, ~$30,000, was provided as a one-time subsidy from the Government of Nepal for piloting grid interconnection.  Future MHP interconnections will not be subsidized.  The current PPA for the MHP is based on the same rates and conditions as those for bigger hydropower projects up to 25MW. Even with those figures, the Syaurebhumi MHP can earn an annual income of nearly $10,600.  If this pilot is successful, it can rejig the antagonistic relationship of MHPs and the national grid into a complementary one. It can also reframe MHPs from being the only recourse of remote villages to being an active contributor of clean energy to the country. What is more, it can also become a feasible business avenue for local entrepreneurs. 
IMPACT OF PRACTICE-TO-POLICY

For HPNET, the grid interconnection of Syaurebhumi validates our belief that regional practice-to-policy dialogue is an invaluable resource of pooling together knowledge, and can provide the little spark that fires up action. For instance, being able to witness a successful grid interconnection in Sri Lanka gave the Nepali policy-makers the confidence to greenlight the grid interconnection pilot. We hope to be able to continue creating these nodes of inspiration.  Perhaps the next practice-to-policy exchange could even include a field trip to Syaurebhumi!
Now that it is finally on-grid and producing electricity again, many in Nepal will be watching its experience keenly.  We congratulate the teams of NEA and AEPC, as well as the wider Nepali microhydro community for toiling relentlessly over the past decade and bringing this MHP grid interconnection pilot to fruition. We wish them more success.

This blogpost is draws generously on an article by Jiwan Kumar Mallik, and a report from the Nepal Micro Hydropower Development Association. Additional information about the Syaurebhumi Micro Hydro project can be found at the UNDP Nepal website here.

Mibi Ete
​HPNET Member
1 Comment
ajeet
5/16/2018 03:09:26 am

Good work Mibster!

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