Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the wind energy potential and energy cost of various types of wind turbines that could be powering rural Areas. The analysis was performed on hourly wind data over three years for five locations measured with a 10 m-high anemometer in Peninsular Malaysia. The...

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Main Authors: Al-Fatlawi, Ali Wadi, Al-Baghdadi, Maher A. R. Sadiq, Togun, Hussein, Ahmadi, Goodarz, Rahman, Saidur, Abd Rahim, Nasrudin
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Published: Diponegoro university Indonesia - Center of Biomass and Renewable Energy (CBIORE) 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/43370/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85128773098&doi=10.14710%2fijred.2022.43477&partnerID=40&md5=32afb0ffa1500643b1268948293f269f
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spelling my.um.eprints.433702023-11-14T01:17:23Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/43370/ Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia Al-Fatlawi, Ali Wadi Al-Baghdadi, Maher A. R. Sadiq Togun, Hussein Ahmadi, Goodarz Rahman, Saidur Abd Rahim, Nasrudin T Technology (General) The purpose of this study is to evaluate the wind energy potential and energy cost of various types of wind turbines that could be powering rural Areas. The analysis was performed on hourly wind data over three years for five locations measured with a 10 m-high anemometer in Peninsular Malaysia. The performance of wind turbines with varying hub heights and rated power was examined. The economic evaluation of wind energy in all sites was based on an analysis of the annual Levelized cost of energy. Results show that the annual mean wind speeds vary from 1.16 m/s in Sitiswan to 2.9 m/s in Mersing, whereas annual power varies from 3.6 to 51.4 W/m2. Moreover, the results show that the cost of unit energy varies between (4.5-0.38) /kWh. The most viable site for the use of wind turbines was Mersing, while Sitiawan was the least viable site. A case study examined three wind turbine models operating at Mersing. The study showed that increasing the inflation escalation rate for operating and maintenance from 0-5 led to a decrease in the unit energy cost by about 38. However, increasing the operating and maintenance escalation rate from 0-10 led to an increase in the unit cost of energy by about 7-8. © 2022. The Authors. Diponegoro university Indonesia - Center of Biomass and Renewable Energy (CBIORE) 2022 Article PeerReviewed Al-Fatlawi, Ali Wadi and Al-Baghdadi, Maher A. R. Sadiq and Togun, Hussein and Ahmadi, Goodarz and Rahman, Saidur and Abd Rahim, Nasrudin (2022) Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia. International Journal of Renewable Energy Development, 11 (2). 413 -421. ISSN 2252-4940, DOI https://doi.org/10.14710/ijred.2022.43477 <https://doi.org/10.14710/ijred.2022.43477>. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85128773098&doi=10.14710%2fijred.2022.43477&partnerID=40&md5=32afb0ffa1500643b1268948293f269f 10.14710/ijred.2022.43477
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic T Technology (General)
spellingShingle T Technology (General)
Al-Fatlawi, Ali Wadi
Al-Baghdadi, Maher A. R. Sadiq
Togun, Hussein
Ahmadi, Goodarz
Rahman, Saidur
Abd Rahim, Nasrudin
Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia
description The purpose of this study is to evaluate the wind energy potential and energy cost of various types of wind turbines that could be powering rural Areas. The analysis was performed on hourly wind data over three years for five locations measured with a 10 m-high anemometer in Peninsular Malaysia. The performance of wind turbines with varying hub heights and rated power was examined. The economic evaluation of wind energy in all sites was based on an analysis of the annual Levelized cost of energy. Results show that the annual mean wind speeds vary from 1.16 m/s in Sitiswan to 2.9 m/s in Mersing, whereas annual power varies from 3.6 to 51.4 W/m2. Moreover, the results show that the cost of unit energy varies between (4.5-0.38) /kWh. The most viable site for the use of wind turbines was Mersing, while Sitiawan was the least viable site. A case study examined three wind turbine models operating at Mersing. The study showed that increasing the inflation escalation rate for operating and maintenance from 0-5 led to a decrease in the unit energy cost by about 38. However, increasing the operating and maintenance escalation rate from 0-10 led to an increase in the unit cost of energy by about 7-8. © 2022. The Authors.
format Article
author Al-Fatlawi, Ali Wadi
Al-Baghdadi, Maher A. R. Sadiq
Togun, Hussein
Ahmadi, Goodarz
Rahman, Saidur
Abd Rahim, Nasrudin
author_facet Al-Fatlawi, Ali Wadi
Al-Baghdadi, Maher A. R. Sadiq
Togun, Hussein
Ahmadi, Goodarz
Rahman, Saidur
Abd Rahim, Nasrudin
author_sort Al-Fatlawi, Ali Wadi
title Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia
title_short Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia
title_full Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia
title_fullStr Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of Malaysia
title_sort techno-economic analysis of wind turbines powering rural of malaysia
publisher Diponegoro university Indonesia - Center of Biomass and Renewable Energy (CBIORE)
publishDate 2022
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/43370/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85128773098&doi=10.14710%2fijred.2022.43477&partnerID=40&md5=32afb0ffa1500643b1268948293f269f
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score 13.214268