Country’s latest solar farm one of the most resource-efficient in the world.
Glinting glass panels that harness sunlight and convert it into
energy is an increasingly common sight as Malaysia charts a path towards
renewable energy. A field of these solar cells recently emerged in
Malacca’s newly developed state administrative centre of Hang Tuah Jaya
in Ayer Keroh.
The panels, all 29,092 of them, form the latest solar farm in the
country and generate enough energy to power 1,800 houses every day. The
8MW facility, called Kompleks Hijau Solar, is developed and operated by
renewable energy company Gading Kencana.
Company managing director Datuk Guntor Tobeng says aside from
generating renewable energy, the solar farm supports Malacca’s goal to
be a green state. It started feeding solar power into the national grid
in mid-December. Under the Feed-in Tariff (FiT) scheme, the company will
be paid 80sen per kilowatt hour of electricity. It received its first
payment of RM900,000 last month.
Launched in late 2011, the FiT scheme enables companies and
house-owners to produce renewable energy from four sources – solar
photovoltaic, biogas (from organic waste, landfill and sewage sludge),
biomass (agricultural waste and garbage) and small hydropower – and sell
it to the grid.
Gading Kencana has been involved in solar street lighting, solar
hybrid systems in rural areas, energy audits and installation of
residential and industrial solar photovoltaic (PV) systems. Its projects
include a 2MW rooftop PV system for PEPS-JV Malaysia in Batang Kali,
Selangor, and a 546kW rooftop PV system for Bosch in Penang.
Guntor says its new solar farm can generate 10,120MWh of electricity
annually and is projected to generate RM8mil annually. It will avoid
carbon emissions amounting to 136,700 tonnes over 21 years (the duration
of the FiT scheme). “This is equivalent to what is emitted by 30 jets
flying every day from KL to London and back, for five and a half years.”
He says the solar farm is deemed to be one of the most
resource-efficient in the world, as it produces 1MW per 0.6ha (1.5
acres) against the worldwide norm of 1MW per 2ha (5 acres). This
impressive yield emerged from a setback – the actual land area turned
out to be smaller than on paper. Guntor had purchased 7.06ha (17.66
acres) of land but in reality it was only 6.86ha (17.17 acres).
He had not checked the site, a rubber tree plantation, as there was
no access road and was only shown a contour map. When he finally viewed
the site, he had another surprise – it was mostly a valley, 30m deep.
“Because of the shortfall in the land area, we had to rethink the
whole design. We had already applied to SEDA (Sustainable Energy
Development Authority) for a 8MW facility, so we had to figure out how
to fit 8MW of panels into a smaller land area,” said Guntor.
His team eventually filled up the valley with some 300,000 cu m of
earth. To fit the smaller site, the panels have to be mounted close
together but this raises the risk of shading.
To counter this, they landscaped the site to create six slopes in
different directions. The team studied 30 different orientations to
obtain the right tilts for the panels. This explains why the panels do
not face the same direction as seen in most solar farms. Instead, two
rows of panels are installed at an angle to each other, resembling a
pitched roof. This A-shaped mounting enables maximum tapping of
sunlight.
The land contouring also enables runoffs to flow into the on-site
detention pond, instead of collecting and eroding the site. Guntor’s
team also studied wind directions and positioned the panels in a way
that ensures good ventilation, to reduce heat build-up in the panels
which can lessen their efficiency.
The solar farm might have a green edge but Guntor still faced
difficulties obtaining financing for the RM84mil project. “We spent a
year talking to many banks and all rejected us. They said we did not
qualify for a large loan.” He eventually got a facilitation fund of
RM11.8mil from Teraju (the Government’s Bumiputra Agenda Steering Unit)
and a RM56mil loan from SME Bank (Small Medium Enterprise Development
Bank).
As Hang Tuah Jaya is a gazetted green zone, all buildings there must
be certified under the Green Building Index. The site building at the
solar farm managed to obtain a GBI platinum rating by incorporating
green building features such as water-saving fittings, harvesting
rainwater and passive cooling through building orientation and design as
well as the use of shading louvres. There are also rooftop solar cells
to generate solar power for use in the building.
The area is reserved for “institutional development” but there is
concern that future neighbouring development might shade the panels. To
prevent this, the company has submitted a request to the Town and
Country Planning Department, asking for a 50m setback for high-rises.
Solar photovoltaics currently contribute 67% of the 270MW of
renewable energy generated in the country currently. Some large PV
installations which are boosting the local power supply with solar
energy are: Amcorp Properties’ 10.25MW solar farm in Gemas, Negri
Sembilan; Cypark Resources’ 8MW farm on a closed landfill in Pajam,
Negri Sembilan; Sunedison’s 5MW farm in Sepang, 4MW on the KLIA rooftop
and 10MW on a parking canopy near KLIA2; and Kumpulan Melaka’s 5MW farm
in Alor Gajah.