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Hybrid Solar Microgrids Up and Running in Colombia’s Forbidding Darièn

The land bridge that links Central and South America, the Darièn is one of the largest remaining areas of largely undeveloped tropical forest in the world, as well as one of the most impenetrable. Encompassing Colombia’s northern and Panama’s southern frontiers, the remote, sparsely populated region is also home to a UNESCO World Heritage site, Panama’s Darièn National Park.

Akin to island and other remote communities, diesel fuel generators are the predominant source of electrical power in the region, if there is any at all. It’s a noisy, polluting, volatile and in the long run, more expensive source of power than solar-energy storage microgrids, the cost of which continue to decline amidst growing installations, project launches and ongoing technological advances.

Residents of Acandi, a Darièn village in Colombia’s Choco province had been wholly dependent on diesel generators, which provided electricity for just a few hours a day. That’s changed for the better as a result of a Colombian government initiative that has resulted in the deployment of five off-grid hybrid solar-energy storage microgrids.

Lighting Up Lives in Remote Communities

Commissioned in May 2015, the five hybrid solar storage-diesel microgrids demonstrate the multiple, self-reinforcing advantages and benefits that can be derived when developing nation governments get their act together and incorporate modern renewable energy and cleantech in their development plans.

*Courtesy Solar Electric Light Fund

*Courtesy Solar Electric Light Fund

As Solar Novus explains in a case study brief, the hybrid solar-diesel microgrids are providing electricity for village homes, schools and small businesses. The system installed in Acandi is designed to meet 60 percent of daily electricity needs for more than 5-6 hours per day, while those installed in the villages of Caleta and Chugandi are able to meet 80 percent.

“Now they don’t have to plan their day around the time that they have electricity. The kids can study at night, the mothers can cook in the evening without the need of using candles,” Ana Maria Murillo, business director for Tecmac Ingeniera, was quoted as saying.

All five incorporate Cummins diesel generators in the energy mix. Designed to meet 100% of electricity needs, the solar-diesel microgrid up and running in Aguas Blancas only relies on diesel power generation as an emergency back-up source, however.

Cali, Colombia-based Tecmac Ingenieria developed and managed the deployments making use of local labor and transporting equipment, supplies and personnel over rough, treacherous roads and by boat. In addition to Cummins’ diesel generators, solar PV panels were sourced from Trina Solar, SMA inverters from Sunny Boy and Sunny Island, and heavy duty, deep cycle lead-acid batteries from Trojan Battery.

Housed in a tropical storm and weatherproofed small building, the off-grid systems require regular maintenance, which is being seen to by local residents Tecmac trained to do the job.

Gradually Gaining Traction

Clean, efficient, cost-effective and straightforward to deploy, solar and renewable energy microgrids seem ideal solutions for expanding energy access and spurring sustainable development in Central and South America given the extent of rugged terrain, diverse geography and prevalence of isolated communities. Regional governments, generally speaking, have been slow to recognize or acknowledge this, or follow through on public pledges and commitments by opening up power markets to new market players and creating institutional frameworks conducive to growth, however.

That said, there are notable exceptions, and renewable energy is gaining traction throughout Latin America. Regional economic powerhouse Brazil continues to conduct solar and wind energy auctions. Costa Rica relies almost entirely on renewable energy resources, primarily hydro, and is diversifying its renewable energy base, while more supportive energy policy and market mechanisms have spurred a utility-scale solar energy boom, and rapid price declines, in Chile.

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Furthermore, industry analysts and multinational renewable and microgrid market players continue to see promise in South and Central America, as well as Caribbean island nations. Regional renewable energy investment (excluding large hydropower) has grown 11-fold since 2004, according to IRENA’s 2016 Latin America Renewable Energy Market Analysis. That compares to an average six-fold increase worldwide.

Furthermore, Chile and Mexico joined Brazil in IRENA’s ranking of the world’s top 10 renewable energy markets in 2015.

¨In recent years, energy security has been a key driver for energy diversification to limit adverse macroeconomic effects due to the high reliance on fossil fuels and to reduce vulnerability to recurring climate events impacting hydropower generation,¨ IRENA Director-General Adnan Z. Amin highlighted in the executive summary.

¨The imperative to decarbonize, together with national energy security concerns, in the context of rapidly falling costs of non-hydropower renewables, provides a compelling case for broader renewable energy development in Latin America,¨ he wrote.

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