Biomass - Energy Toolbox

Technical Aspects of the Development of Dendro-power (continued)

 

The Economics of Dendro-Power

In this section we examine the economics of dendro-power and ask the quetion how much will it cost to establish a moderate-sized generation plan, how much will it cost to operate and how will this compare to operation from the use of coal. Again the examples are drawn from Sri Lankan and Indian experience. Costs are given in Sri Lankan rupees (Rs), which can be taken to be equivalent of a US cent, i.e. 100 Rs = 1 US$, or more precisely 102 Rs = 1 US$

  Dendro Coal Biomass
TECHNICAL      
Plant Capacity MW 10.00 10.00  
Dollar Parity Rs/ Us$ 102.00 102.00  
Cost of fuel delivered /kg dry 2,000.00 6,000.00  
Interest rate 10.00% 10.00%  
O D Rate 12.00% 12.00%  
Capital Cost US$/KW 1,000.00 1,200.00  
Tariff Rs/KWh 8.50 8.50  
Internal Consumption % 10.00% 10.00%  
No of Days Run/Yr 330 330  
Specific Fuel Consumption kg/kwh 1.50 0.50  
Calorific value Kcal/kg 3,700.00 6,000.00  
Overall Efficiency 15.52 28.71  
       
FINANCIAL      
ROC (Return on Capital) 17.65% 12.43%  
ROSE 93.31% 35.52%  
IRR over 7 years 13.06% 7.85%  
IRR over 20 years 19.42% 15.20%  
Payback Period (Yrs) 5.67 8.05  

A detailed breakdown of the capital and recurrent costs involved with the establishment and operation of a dendro-power unit of 10MW can be accessed here. As indicated above, the figures suggest that the IRR over 20 years is expected to be close to 19%, with a payback period of 5.7 years. Total capital costs would be of the order of $11.8 million.

The main assumptions made for this calculation are provided on the spreadsheet. It is assumed that the wood consumption of 1.5 kg/kwh. The plant would produce an output of 71,280,000 KWh on the basis of operation of 330 days/year with 10% of the power being used internally. Total amount of wood that will be required will equal 118,800 tonnes/year at a cost of Rs2,000/tonne.
View Paper [PDF 154Kb]


A similar spreadsheet has been prepared for a similar plan operating from coal. Capital investment of around $14.4 million will be required. The figures are based on the consumption rate of 0.5 kg/kwh. The IRR is estimated to be around 15% over 20 years with a payback period of 8.0 years. The cost of coal is taken to be Rs6,000/tonne For simplicity, in both cases a constant rate of Rs8.50/kwh - the current rate.
View Paper [PDF 160Kb]


Technical aspects subindex

Technical aspects of dendro-power - page 1
Technical aspects of dendro-power - page 2
Technical aspects of dendro-power - page 3
Subsections
Grid and Off-grid power generation
Industrial Heat Energy
Household Sector
Transport Sector