Embedded Generation Using Shared Solar

The socio-economic development of a country (especially a developing one) is inextricably linked with the availability and affordability of electricity in that country. However most African countries have failed to bridge the gap between the demand and supply of electricity in their country owing ei...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Obar Eric Akpoviroro, Touati Abdelwahed, Rabbah Nabila
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2021-01-01
Series:E3S Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/05/e3sconf_iccsre2021_01026.pdf
id doaj-1527e0f6a88845c8bcdf06771ecc6d09
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1527e0f6a88845c8bcdf06771ecc6d092021-01-26T08:19:08ZengEDP SciencesE3S Web of Conferences2267-12422021-01-012290102610.1051/e3sconf/202122901026e3sconf_iccsre2021_01026Embedded Generation Using Shared SolarObar Eric Akpoviroro0Touati Abdelwahed1Rabbah Nabila2Laboratory of Structural Engineering, Intelligent Systems and Electrical Engineering ENSAM, Hassan II UniversityLaboratory of Structural Engineering, Intelligent Systems and Electrical Engineering ENSAM, Hassan II UniversityLaboratory of Structural Engineering, Intelligent Systems and Electrical Engineering ENSAM, Hassan II UniversityThe socio-economic development of a country (especially a developing one) is inextricably linked with the availability and affordability of electricity in that country. However most African countries have failed to bridge the gap between the demand and supply of electricity in their country owing either to the non-availability of power or the lack of synergy between the various disciplines that make up the power sector. Bedevilled with the current Covid-19 pandemic which ushers in the digital era of E-learning and virtual trade activities, Africa cannot afford to lag behind as a result of poor electricity supply. Our case study in this paper will be Africa’s most populous country; Nigeria. We would look at the aged long practice of a centralized system of energy production which generates and transmits electricity over long distances (thereby incurring colossal losses), the limitations of the National grid which covers only some parts of the country, the legal constraints, the resort to self-help by Nigerians who seek to produce their own electricity using generators that emit GHG which pollute the atmosphere and the economic implication of running generators, while proffering an eco-friendly solution in distributed or dispersed generation using Shared Solar Energy aimed at resolving the disparity between the demand and supply of Electricity. A solution which will invariably unlock economic growth especially during this Covid-19 pandemic.https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/05/e3sconf_iccsre2021_01026.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Obar Eric Akpoviroro
Touati Abdelwahed
Rabbah Nabila
spellingShingle Obar Eric Akpoviroro
Touati Abdelwahed
Rabbah Nabila
Embedded Generation Using Shared Solar
E3S Web of Conferences
author_facet Obar Eric Akpoviroro
Touati Abdelwahed
Rabbah Nabila
author_sort Obar Eric Akpoviroro
title Embedded Generation Using Shared Solar
title_short Embedded Generation Using Shared Solar
title_full Embedded Generation Using Shared Solar
title_fullStr Embedded Generation Using Shared Solar
title_full_unstemmed Embedded Generation Using Shared Solar
title_sort embedded generation using shared solar
publisher EDP Sciences
series E3S Web of Conferences
issn 2267-1242
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The socio-economic development of a country (especially a developing one) is inextricably linked with the availability and affordability of electricity in that country. However most African countries have failed to bridge the gap between the demand and supply of electricity in their country owing either to the non-availability of power or the lack of synergy between the various disciplines that make up the power sector. Bedevilled with the current Covid-19 pandemic which ushers in the digital era of E-learning and virtual trade activities, Africa cannot afford to lag behind as a result of poor electricity supply. Our case study in this paper will be Africa’s most populous country; Nigeria. We would look at the aged long practice of a centralized system of energy production which generates and transmits electricity over long distances (thereby incurring colossal losses), the limitations of the National grid which covers only some parts of the country, the legal constraints, the resort to self-help by Nigerians who seek to produce their own electricity using generators that emit GHG which pollute the atmosphere and the economic implication of running generators, while proffering an eco-friendly solution in distributed or dispersed generation using Shared Solar Energy aimed at resolving the disparity between the demand and supply of Electricity. A solution which will invariably unlock economic growth especially during this Covid-19 pandemic.
url https://www.e3s-conferences.org/articles/e3sconf/pdf/2021/05/e3sconf_iccsre2021_01026.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT obarericakpoviroro embeddedgenerationusingsharedsolar
AT touatiabdelwahed embeddedgenerationusingsharedsolar
AT rabbahnabila embeddedgenerationusingsharedsolar
_version_ 1724323188202012672