Launch Ceremony of Natural Gas Services in Turkey’s 101 Districts

President Erdoğan spoke during an inauguration ceremony to launch natural gas services for 101 districts at the Presidential Palace complex in Ankara. During his speech, he said that Turkey's recent stance regarding offshore drilling activities off Cyprus "had hopefully been instructive for some who saw an opportunity to start unilateral moves in the region when Turkey is engaged in anti-terrorism operations elsewhere.

All steps in the waters surrounding Cyprus should be taken through the participation of both Turkish and Greek parties, including investments and the share of discovered resources, Erdoğan said.

"Turkish and Greek Cyprus should form a joint committee for drilling activities and both sides should get their fair share of the island's natural resources based on their populations," the president said. He further reiterated Turkey's resolution to protect its and Turkish Cyprus's rights in the Eastern Mediterranean, especially in terms of hydrocarbons.

He also announced that Turkey's first drilling vessel, which has the most cutting-edge technology in its field of operation with a width of 36 meters and a weight of 51 gross tons, will soon depart to start drilling operations in the Eastern Mediterranean.

In order to decrease its dependency on external resources and to meet rising energy demand as a result of steady economic growth, Turkey has been carrying out energy investments and projects and diversifying its resources. Over the past 15 years, energy investments have reached TL 172 billion ($43.8 billion) and public investments totaled TL 41.3 billion. Investments in natural gas distribution was TL 11.2 billion.

Erdoğan said that Turkey aims to reduce its energy dependency, and the construction of the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant, the country's first, will begin this year. "President Putin and I will jointly participate in the groundbreaking ceremony," Erdoğan said, explaining that they also spoke about it during a phone call to congratulate Putin's on his re-election in Russia on Monday.

Erdoğan and Putin are expected to meet in Turkey in the first week of April. The two leaders will chair the seventh meeting of the Turkish-Russian High-Level Cooperation Council. Later, the two presidents will reportedly lay the foundation for the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant, which will cost an estimated $20 billion.

Turkey's energy imports amount to roughly $55 billion annually and its energy demand is among the fastest-growing in Europe. Ankara aims for at least 10 percent of its power generation to come from nuclear energy in less than a decade to cut dependency on natural gas.

Source: Daily Sabah

Turkey Produces 58.4 Billion Kwh of Hydropower in 2017

Turkey produced 58.4 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity from hydropower plants in 2017 despite the most severe drought of the past 44 years and has plans to expand production to 90 billion kWh, the country's Forestry and Water Minister Veysel Eroglu told.

"The 58.4 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity from hydropower plants in 2017 boosted the Turkish economy by adding 9.9 million Turkish liras," Eroglu said. He added that Turkey constructed 511 hydropower plants since 2003 when new investment strategies were put into practice through public-private sector cooperation.
In 2003, Turkey had 276 hydropower plants with a production capacity of 26 billion kWh. Since then hydropower has supported the Turkish economy with the addition of $30 million. According to the minister, one in four houses in Turkey are currently powered by electricity generated in hydropower plants.

Eroglu commended hydroelectric power plants for providing clean and renewable energy without causing environmental pollution or greenhouse gas emissions. He also acknowledged that hydropower plants are able to help control water levels to prevent floods.

Turkey plans to produce 110 billion kWh of electricity from hydropower by the end of 2019, Eroglu asserted. The private sector in Turkey built 56 hydropower plants, which are yet to be officially launched, he concluded. (1 USD = 3.9 TRY)

Source: IENE

Special Interview with Power Ledger by Can Arslan

Power Ledger is the world leading, peer-to-peer software for distributed energy resources. Using blockchain technology, the platform provides transparent, auditable and automated market trading and clearing mechanism for residential and commercial businesses to decide who they sell their surplus energy to and at what price.

Power Ledger first deployed its platform in residential development projects in Australia and New Zealand. Most recently, they’ve partnered with Thai Government backed renewable energy provider BCPG, Tech Mahindra in India and clean energy not-for-profit organization, Help answers in North America.

The Australian Government has also funded part of an AU $8 million project which will use the Power Ledger platform to integrate distributed energy and water systems in the city of Fremantle, Australia. Power Ledger will provide the transactional layer for the renewable assets including community batteries.

ELDER Blockchain Observation and Research Group contacted with world’s leading blockchain power application Power Ledger last week to find answers to the most asked questions. We talked to Co-founder and Managing Director David Martin:

Blockchain technology is a hot topic in several industries and energy is one of them. We see and read every day another whitepaper from an energy start-up with a blockchain based solution. If we compare at the scale of their deployment, projects are still in micro-scale. When would you expect to grow the scale of Power Ledger projects in distribution region level and what needs to be done before scaling up P2P trading projects?

The more energy startups that surface with a blockchain-based solution only legitimizes the space. The energy sector has plenty of room for competitors -- It’s a massive industry. In saying that, not all solutions are created equally. A recent GTM Research report on blockchain in the energy sector independently researched Power Ledger as well as others and ranked them by means of projects deployed or planned. I’m proud to see Power Ledger leading the pack with our peer-to-peer energy trading, electric vehicle charging and transactive energy solutions. We’re actively working to grow the scale of the Power Ledger platform right now, on projects with Tech Mahindra in India, BCPG in Thailand with a number of projects in Australia and North America also in the pipeline.

We have a lot of important work in front of us and our business development team is incredibly focused on meeting with utilities, network operators and other potential partners to introduce the Power Ledger platform to new regions. Of course, each jurisdiction comes with its own regulations so part of what needs to be done comes from a legal standpoint to ensure interoperability within as well as between jurisdictions.

The market for electricity is massive, over 70% of the world population and we intend to scale the platform globally. Over the next 18 months we aim to have the Platform being used in 12 jurisdictions and trading 100s of MWs. Currently, we’re having conversations with retailers looking to use the Platform to trade across the network with all their customers. In this case, we are moving from microgrid and embedded network environments, which are just as valuable to the end users, to across-the-meter solutions.  

Our readers are asking what does blockchain technology bring extra on the top of cloud services. How do you use these two technologies together? What are the limits of cloud services and blockchain technology in terms of building a P2P Energy Trading App?

A system that fuses cloud services with blockchain technology gives complete traceability to the cloud. It also enables regulators to audit all the processes and all involved parties are able to verify actions and be held responsible for those actions via the blockchain.

In terms of limitations, due to the chain nature of the blockchain, each new record has to be updated before the other can exist, unlike traditional databases which can update data in parallel. While this poses scalability questions, our Platform was built specifically for that scale, and is ready to be used, with some minor customizations needing to be made.

One would expect that the decentralization would be a threat for operators; but we see that there is an interest of DSOs and EMOs in Power Ledger, how do they benefit from your services? 

We’re giving them the tools to make sustainability profitable. And sustainability needs to be profitable in order to be sustainable. We realized pretty quickly that if we were going to be the application host, that managed all of those trading environments, we'd need to grow to a company of millions to have the reach we want to have, which would destroy the value proposition for us.

Instead, we’re taking what was an application and turning it into a platform that other people can access and deploy for their own needs. The trials we’re doing now with DSOs and EMOs are about proving the different application models, so other people can monetize their involvement in trading while simultaneously allowing their consumers to monetize their investment in distributed renewables.

Power Ledger was created to fuse the blockchain with energy markets, creating a level of sophistication that facilitates peer-to-peer decentralized energy trading -- a new concept where renewable energy can be sold between buyers and sellers, without an intermediary.

There is an ongoing debate that blockchain platforms must enable monitoring and reporting tools inside for the regulators and there must be certain standards before deploying a project in large scale. How is it in Australian market? Do you attend meetings to discuss the regulations on blockchain applications or expect that the regulations should come after a while?

Our regulator AEMO (Australian Energy Market Operator) is doing a lot of work to manage that transition from a centralized to a hybridized system. That market reform needs to happen in order to really enable the technologies to be deployed, not just disrupting the technology but managing the system resiliently in the transition. There is quite a lot of market reform that needs to happen, but there seems to be a good sentiment towards renewable energies.

Just last week, Dr. Jemma Green was on an Australian Financial Review panel with Australia’s Environment and Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg, TransGrid CEO Paul Italiano, and EnergyAustralia MD Catherine Tannato to discuss policy and regulations in Australia. Paul and Jemma both sit on the expert panel for AEMO and are looking at more systemic reform.

These kinds of meetings aren’t uncommon for us. We’re introduced to regulators in different jurisdictions via our partners to ensure the regulators understand what we’re trying to achieve via the blockchain and the policy reflects that. At present, Power Ledger is working within the existing regulations to rollout our product and we’ve hired an inhouse lawyer to ensure we continue to do so.

Interview: Can ARSLAN

Utility Managers Build Business Case for Digital Technologies

The rise of digital technologies for power plants has moved in fits and starts over the past several years, with some generators quickly embracing digitization of their assets while others are looking to justify potential investments.

Suppliers of digital technologies have widely marketed the benefits, but many generators are looking to current end users for information about what the implementation of digitization means for their plants. Presenters at POWER magazine’s ELECTRIC POWER Conference + Exhibition on March 22 talked about the benefits—and some of the challenges—they’ve experienced with digitization at their facilities, in a session titled “Building a Business Case for Digital Technologies.”

Phillip Yakimow, manager and principal engineer for performance monitoring for Xcel Energy; Michael Reid, general manager for technical programs for Duke Energy; Crystal Bettinger, supervisor of predictive maintenance at Westar Energy’s Jeffrey Energy Center in Kansas; and Brian Wolf, lead performance and optimization consultant for Black & Veatch, presented case studies outlining how digitization has worked at their plants.

“You want people to see the monitoring and diagnostic [M&D] program is growing and providing value,” said Reid, who said Duke has added many additional sensors to equipment to capture data. “We’ve saved about 135% above what we spent on the additional sensors. People talk about saving money, but what we’re doing is getting to the work we should be doing and weren’t doing.”

Wolf and Bettinger talked about Westar’s M&D, which includes anomaly detection using advanced pattern recognition (APR) at three coal units (2,400 MW total generation capacity) and a 100-MW wind farm, measuring about 17,500 data points. “We measure vibration and [other data],” Wolf said. “We’re creating intelligent models to cover everything in the plant. The software may give us 100 things we need to look at every hour,” but the intelligence in the system determines what problems—usually just one or a few—are worthy of escalation.

“It also enables our [technicians] in the field to respond quickly on their phone or tablet when they’re notified of an issue,” said Bettinger, whose Westar utility, based in Topeka, Kansas, has total generating capacity of about 8,000 MW.

“Turbine vibration is different than a heat rate problem,” Wolf said, noting how his group’s software separates immediate problems from those that don’t need quick action. “Make your data smarter. You don’t need more data, you need it to work for you.”

Source: Powermag

Global Energy Demand Grew By 2.1% in 2017, And Carbon Emissions Rose For The First Time Since 2014

Global energy demand rose by 2.1% in 2017, more than twice the previous year’s rate, boosted by strong global economic growth, with oil, gas and coal meeting most of the increase in demand for energy, and renewables seeing impressive gains.

Over 70% of global energy demand growth was met by oil, natural gas and coal, while renewables accounted for almost all of the rest. Improvements in energy efficiency slowed down last year. As a result of these trends, global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions increased by 1.4% in 2017, after three years of remaining flat.

But carbon emissions, which reached a historical high of 32.5 gigatonnes in 2017, did not rise everywhere. While most major economies saw a rise, others – the United States, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Japan – experienced declines. The biggest drop in emissions came from the United States, driven by higher renewables deployment.

These findings are part of the International Energy Agency’s newest resource – the Global Energy and CO2 Status Report, 2017 – released online today, which provides an up-to-date snapshot of recent trends and developments across all fuels.

“The robust global economy pushed up energy demand last year, which was mostly met by fossil fuels, while renewables made impressive strides,” said Dr Fatih Birol, the IEA’s Executive Director. “The significant growth in global energy-related carbon dioxide emissions in 2017 tells us that current efforts to combat climate change are far from sufficient. For example, there has been a dramatic slowdown in the rate of improvement in global energy efficiency as policy makers have put less focus in this area.”

Other key findings of the report for 2017 include:

- Oil demand grew by 1.6%, more than twice the average annual rate seen over the past decade, driven by the transport sector (in particular a growing share of SUVs and trucks in major economies) as well as rising petrochemical demand.

- Natural gas consumption grew 3%, the most of all fossil fuels, with China alone accounting for nearly a third of this growth, and the buildings and industry sectors contributing to 80% of the increase in global demand.

- Coal demand rose about 1%, reversing declines over the previous two years, driven by an increase in coal-fired electricity generation mostly in Asia.

- Renewables had the highest growth rate of any fuel, meeting a quarter of world energy demand growth, as renewables-based electricity generation rose 6.3%, driven by expansion of wind, solar and hydropower.

- Electricity generation increased by 3.1%, significantly faster than overall energy demand, and India and China together accounting for 70% of the global increase.

- Energy efficiency improvements slowed significantly, with global energy intensity improving by only 1.7% in 2017 compared with 2.3% on average over the last three years, caused by an apparent slowdown in efficiency policy coverage and stringency and lower energy prices.

- Fossil fuels accounted for 81% of total energy demand in 2017, a level that has remained stable for more than three decades.

Source: IEA

Modular Power and Renewables

Pairing renewable energy with diesel and gas-fired generators to electrify remote and hard-to-access regions all over the world is helping increase energy access and beefing up clean energy competitiveness.

With abundant free energy sources such as wind and solar power just waiting to be harnessed, it is unacceptable that areas of the world have intermittent power or no power supply at all. Fuel flexibility creates opportunities to bring electricity to these areas.

Fuel flexibility might be a matter of reducing the pressure of a gas supply, turning flare gas into power, or it could mean creating a hybrid generation source that seamlessly switches between solar, wind or hydropower plus a robust, uninterruptible generator powered by gas or diesel, to bring round the clock reliable electricity.

“Flexibility is the name of the game,” said Dan Ibbetson, Aggreko Group Business Development Director. “For us, it’s about finding a way to bring power in the most efficient, cost effective and convenient way to the customer and that means thinking out of the box.”

Aggreko was founded more than 50 years ago, originally renting diesel, then gas, generators to more recently offering generators that can run renewable fuels.

“We change and adapt to meet changing needs, so if a customer has high pressure gas, we work hard to find a way to use that gas. The same is true of other available resources,” said Ibbetson.

The fall in the price of solar in recent years has made solar generated power a viable solution for countries, communities and industries. However, the sun doesn’t shine 24 hours a day, and even in the regions with the highest insolation, clouds and other weather unpredictability make PV an unreliable standalone fuel source.

That’s where hybrid power comes into its own, and a mobile, modular power package, such as what Aggreko offers, brings a number of benefits.

Renting energy means that companies, whether government utilities or remote independent businesses, save time and money. It means their capital is not tied up in equipment that can sometimes take years to be delivered and brought online, and because they don’t own it they don’t have to service and maintain it. They just pay for what they use.

A rented energy arrangement frees up capital that can then be ploughed back into the business. For instance, Peter Yealands of Yealands Winery in New Zealand estimates that he saves $1 million a year by renting energy instead of buying the power equipment he would need to run his winery.

Aggreko offers a solar-diesel hybrid package, such as the 30-MW system it is currently supplying to Eritrea, which comprises 7.5 MW of solar power, supported by 22 MW of diesel generated power. The company estimates that this solution is saving around 20 percent of the fuel costs of diesel-only power. Because the systems are mobile and modular, the ratios can be amended, as demand dictates, and scaled up or down according to need.

INNOVATIONS IN OFFSHORE WIND + BATTERIES

Wind generated electricity can also be paired with other generation sources. Aggreko helped Statoil commission the world’s first floating wind farm, Hywind, 15 miles off the north-east coast of Scotland in the fall of 2017. Aggreko-owned battery storage company, Younicos, has plans to install the first battery storage system to the floating wind farm in 2018 in a project called Batwind.

Hywind comprises five 6-MW turbines, tethered to the seabed via an anchor, instead of sitting on the traditional monopole drilled into the seabed. Monopiles take months to construct and can generally go to a maximum depth of about 50 meters, which limits how far out to sea they can be located. Floating turbines can be anchored in depths of up to 800 meters, which Statoil estimates could open up 80 percent of the world’s deep continental shelves to offshore wind energy.

In this case, it was the collaboration between Statoil and Aggreko that made this offshore floating wind farm possible. The turbines have a power demand of around 5 to 10 kW, but when their on-board pump starts up the demand shoots up to 50 to 60 kW in a matter of seconds.

This sudden demand creates a sharp power spike that can immediately shut down a generator if it’s not powerful enough to cope with the surge. The turbines would require a 125-kVA generator, which is too big and heavy for the turbine, so Aggreko proposed the idea of a soft start to create a gentler demand curve.

As a result, each 6-MW turbine now has its own onboard 60-kVA Aggreko generator that controls a number of vital functions, including lighting, heating and dehumidification, pitching and yawing controls, as well as the pump. A 60-kVA unit is nearly half the weight of its 125-kVA brother, so it can be lifted by the turbine’s Davit crane and sit comfortably on the man access platform.

In addition, the 60-kVA generator consumes less fuel, so it is much more economical to run. Aggreko’s equipment is fitted with proprietary real-time data monitoring, which we call ARM (Aggreko Remote Monitoring), so refuelling, inspections and overall operations and maintenance can be done at longer intervals, and from a standard crew vessel.

Considering it takes 30 minutes for a crewman just to climb up and down the turbine, and with five in this wind farm, ARM is saving considerable man-hours looking for potential issues, checking fuel levels and refuelling.

In addition to the on-board generators that help power the floating wind farm, other innovations using batteries and wind power are also under investigation.

Later this year, Younicos will install two Y Cubes, 10-foot modular battery containers, at the Hywind substation in Peterhead, Scotland to understand how the batteries can help increase the wholesale value of wind-generated electricity when it is sold onto the grid.

The installation includes Younicos’s YQ software, which is the brain that ensures the battery knows when to hold back and store electricity, and when to send it out to the grid based on price signals it will be set to receive.

HYDROPOWER AND BATTERY STORAGE

Droughts are occurring in areas of the world that rely on hydropower so a back-up of a diesel or gas hybrid package can give utilities peace of mind knowing that they can fulfil their contractual obligations to their customers and not leave households, schools, hospitals and manufacturing businesses without power.

Aggreko also works with hydro and stepped in to bridge the gap in power availability that resulted from the failure of the Basslink interconnector between Tasmania and the Australian mainland.

“Combining renewables with traditional energy generation creates the opportunity to bring power where it would otherwise have been unavailable,” said Aggreko Chief Executive, Chris Weston.

“We have always believed in the opportunities that power delivers. Nothing happens without power, and that is unacceptable, anywhere in the world. Renewables are certainly the future, and we are happy to look at any technological advancement that helps bring power to the world.”

Source: Renewable Energy World

Article

Eurelectric has made its 2017 Annual Activity Report available to the public. The report provides an overview of key policy results but also communications and lobbying achievements during 2017. Members’ collective efforts and resulting accomplishments are concisely summarized in the opening chapter “2017 at a glance”. The report also features an exclusive interview with eurelectric President Francesco Starace, outlining, among other items, his vision for the European electricity sector.

Please click here to read the full report.