1 / 23

Updating Mongolia’s Energy Masterplan

Updating Mongolia’s Energy Masterplan. Michael J. Emmerton , ADB Team Leader - 24 May 2013. Energy Masterplanning Challenges. Large land area Sparse population on the move Minerals Extraction (mines) Industrialization Natural Fibres Meat and milk Oil refining Minerals processing

vevina
Télécharger la présentation

Updating Mongolia’s Energy Masterplan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Updating Mongolia’s Energy Masterplan Michael J. Emmerton, ADB Team Leader - 24 May 2013

  2. Energy Masterplanning Challenges • Large land area • Sparse population on the move • Minerals Extraction (mines) • Industrialization • Natural Fibres • Meat and milk • Oil refining • Minerals processing • Industrial Parks (smelters)

  3. Mongolia’s 15 Strategic Mineral Deposits

  4. Mongolia’s Potential Electricity Intensification

  5. Mongolia’s Potential Demand Growth

  6. Combined Heat & Power Plants

  7. Myth no. 1 – Mongolia’s CHP Plants are inefficient • Compared to modern plant • Water consumption high • Pollutants high • Thermal Efficiency • CHP4 - total thermal efficiency ~ 55% • Power-to-Heat ratio ~0.29

  8. CHP Cogeneration & Condensing Products

  9. Myth no. 1 – Mongolia’s CHP Plants are inefficient • CHP4 • Total thermal efficiency – 55% • New CHP in Mongolia • Heat production efficiency – 89% • Electric power efficiency – 46.7% • Total thermal efficiency – 59.7% • CHP in continuous cogeneration mode • Total thermal efficiency – 89%

  10. Taishir Hydropower, Gobi Altai – 11MW

  11. Myth no. 2 – Hydropower is best choice to serve Mongolia’s peak energy demand • All previous studies have compared a hydropower plant to a ‘hypothetic’ gas turbine operating at time of peak load • Cost estimates have been varied and generally too low

  12. Mongolia’s Expected HPP Capital Costs

  13. Myth no. 2 – Hydropower is best choice to serve Mongolia’s peak energy demand • Design optimization shows that an HPP c constructed on Sheuren river system has optimal design, from cost and energy perspective, if • 390MW • 1,260GWhr per annum • Capacity factor ~ 55%

  14. Sheuren HPP (300MW) Despatch May 2022

  15. NewcomSalkhitWindpark – 50MW

  16. Myth no. 3 – Mongolia’s Wind & Solar resources can be exploited to supply Asia • Wind and solar PV suffers from intermittency • In Mongolia there is little wind in winter months • Across vast distances in Mongolia, and with a small capacity system, controlling a transmission grid with significant intermittent power sources is a complex undertaking

  17. Diurnal Net Power Production (200MW Wind)

  18. Economics of Energy Technology in Mongolia

  19. Investment in Energy Supply in Mongolia • Heat Supply • A new CHP plant is the most economical heat supply for UB city • Large Heat Only Boiler (HOB) is needed to bridge from now to 2018 • Total investment in heat supply will be of the order of $3.5B (money of the day basis). • Half of the Aimag heating systems need replacement within the next five years at a cost of around $ 150m.

  20. Investment in Energy Supply in Mongolia • Hydropower in 2022 • Capacity 390MW, min 1,000GWh p.a. • Est. Cost $900m • Benefits • Reduced operating costs • More wind farms • Provides opportunity for Mongolia to develop the capability to control system frequency across its vast transmission network

  21. Investment in Energy Supply in Mongolia • T&D Networks • Strengthen to reduce energy losses, improve reliability • Economic to supply mines up to 100MW if within 300km of existing grid • In time create a Mongolian super-grid at 400kV to support industrial centres

  22. Investment in Transmission & Distribution

  23. Support Clean Energy Research • Under Mongolian conditions • Renewable energy technologies - solar heating schemes, geothermal schemes • Involve the young and brightest engineers in interesting projects that support Mongolia’s future direction

More Related