The Philippine Star

Asean seen turning to floating solar plants as demand shifts

- By DANESSA RIVERA

Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) region is seen to install more floating solar plants to balance and make grids flexible to changing power demand after the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) pandemic drasticall­y changed demand landscape.

Based on its latest report, global research firm Institute for Energy Economic and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) said Asia is leading Europe in deploying floating solar, also known as floating photovolta­ic (FPV).

The ASEAN regional bloc— composed of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, and Vietnam—has over 51 megawatts (MW) installed and 858 MW planned from just 1 MW installed before 2019.

According to IEEFA, the ASEAN market has the potential of at least 24 gigawatts (MW) in FPV capacity.

The Philippine­s, in particular, has the potential to build 11 GW of FPV from just from five percent of its water surface, which could power up to 7.2 million households.

Energy finance analysts Sara Jane Ahmed and Elrika Hamdi, the authors of the report, said the region is best positioned to take advantage to benefit from the cost-competitiv­e FPV generation especially after the COVID-19 pandemic drove some government­s to implement lockdowns, which affected power demand drasticall­y.

Most ASEAN countries are net importers of fossil fuels, exposing them to severe and escalating energy security risks with resulting economic consequenc­es such as negative trade balances and supply risks.

They said power demand in the Philippine­s and Malaysia has dropped by as much as 16 percent during the COVID-19 lockdown, causing extreme stress to electricit­y grids due to excess power, although such falls have been smaller in Vietnam and Singapore where the pandemic measures have been less stringent to date.

“If the COVID-19 outbreak is to teach one lesson, it would be that utility companies need agile operations, not outdated power stations that burn coal 24/7 and cannot respond quickly to sudden changes or outages,” Ahmed said.

“Our research shows more and more ASEAN countries are building solar farms that float on rivers, dams, lakes and reservoirs – even the sea – to produce clean electricit­y at prices that can compete with power from polluting coal-fired plants,” she said.

These floating solar plants are best when installed near hydropower facilities and able to piggyback existing connection­s to electricit­y grids, the report said.

This is because floating solar power can also balance out the peaks and troughs of consumer demand in complex electricit­y systems.

“The combinatio­n of floating solar and hydro on existing dams and reservoirs trumps the economics of adding new baseload coal-fired power plants on grid systems such as the Java-Bali network that already have generation overcapaci­ty,” Hamdi said.

When faced with typhoons, floating solar installati­ons have shown they can withstand typhoons, powerful waves, and winds gusting up to 170 kilometers an hour, with offshore FPV now being tested by manufactur­ers, she said.

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