Small thermal plants hold promise for regions without grid electricity

2nd November 2018 By: Nadine James - Features Deputy Editor

Small-scale power generation plants driven by hydrocarbon sources and biomass are still likely to play a valuable part in rolling out electricity in regions of Africa unserved by grid power and where there are insufficient renewable resources to sustain a reliable energy supply, according to SRK Consulting partner and principal environmental consultant Chris Dalgliesh.

In a press release last month, Dalgliesh stated that the lack of a secure baseload energy supply in certain areas could be a key inhibitor of local or regional investment and economic development – and many countries were looking beyond the traditional large-grid model to create broader access to electricity.

“In some cases, a small thermal plant generating 25 MW to 100 MW of power can be a more affordable developmental intervention for a local area, especially if it does not incur the often prohibitive costs of transmission infrastructure across long distances,” said Dalgliesh.

He added that SRK’s experience in various parts of the world suggested that countries well endowed with coal, gas or oil, as well as surplus biomass and combustible waste, could benefit from these options while responsibly managing the environmental impacts.

While the trend was undoubtedly to renewables, thermal plants also had the potential to augment supply from renewable energy sources in localised power generation projects, ensuring continuous electricity supply, he commented.

Through its extensive involvement in environmental-impact assessments (EIAs) for renewable energy ventures, SRK has also provided EIAs and compliance reviews for projects like small thermal power stations and closed-circuit gas turbine power plants.

It is worth noting that the most common environmental impacts of thermal plants – emissions and noise vibration – can be suitably managed to meet the relevant legal compliance requirements.

Emissions can by reduced by improved scrubbing technologies, as well as by selecting lower-sulphur hydrocarbon sources, although they cannot match renewable sources in this respect.

“These [environmental] impacts are much more manageable today than they were in the past,” said SRK Consulting principal environmental consultant Sue Reuther.

She pointed to closed-circuit water systems, which had substantially reduced the hydrological impact of these plants, as well as mitigation measures to insulate noise and vibration.

Reuther added that, even in regions where traditional fossil fuel sources were not easily available, there was scope for using agricultural waste as a biomass source to feed a thermal power plant.

She pointed to the success in the recycling of bagasse from sugar cane in various cogeneration plants on the continent.

“Turbine technology is readily available to leverage the value of biomass sources, an option which could link constructively to agricultural production in Africa’s rural areas,” added Dalgliesh.

He commented that waste-to-energy power plants were attractive propositions because they met the dual purpose of treating waste and generating power.

He concluded that, while renewable energy was set to play a larger – and more environmentally sustainable – role in the global energy mix, a pragmatic and responsible approach to the potential of small-scale thermal power plants could contribute substantially to improving conditions and supporting development in marginalised areas of Africa.