Seminar on Universalisation of Roshni, - a Green Innovation for sustainable urban habitats...
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Transcript of Seminar on Universalisation of Roshni, - a Green Innovation for sustainable urban habitats...
Seminar onUniversalisation of “Roshni”,
- a Green Innovation for sustainable urban habitats
Presentation
By
Ministry of New and Renewable EnergyGovt. of India
Roshni Programme
Under the Roshni Programme, 50 KW SPV Power Plant at Auditorium and 100 SPV street lights.
The SPV power plant also supplies power to the
conventional street lights.
Cow dung based 25 cu. m. biogas plant installed by
KVIC for mess of PBG.
SPV installation under Roshni
50 kw SPV power plant 100 SPV stand alone street lights
Special Area Demonstration Project Scheme
The Scheme aims at providing clean and green energy at places of National and International importance including prominent monuments and religious shrines.
Places include 28 World Heritage Sites, Parliament House, Raj Ghat, Rashtrpati Bhawan including retreats, Raj Bhawans, State Assemblies, Secretariats, Collectoraits, etc.
Some installations
80 KW SPV power plant, 2000 lpd solar water heating system installed at the Parliament House.
17 Raj Bhawans in 15 States supported at Kolkatta, Raipur, Jaipur, Chandigarh(Punjab), Chandigarh(Haryana), Jammu, Srinagar, Dehradun, Nainital, Bhopal, Itanagar, Agartala, Imphal, Chennai, Lucknow, Ranchi and Hyderabad.
Projects completed at Raj Bhawans of Kolkatta, Raipur, Jaipur and Jammu, and at other Raj Bhawans during this year.
Status
• 5 KW SPV power plant, 5000 lpd SWH system installed and 5 tonne/day mule dung based Biogas plant by June at the Vaishnodevi Shrine.
• 20 KW solar power plant, 2000 lpd SWH system installed at Kwaja Dargah Sharief in Ajmer.
• SPV systems installed at Chittorgarh Fort, Jantar Mantar, Safdarjung Tomb and Saifi villa at Dandi (lighting and illumination).
• Out of 77 projects supported so far, majority will be completed during the year.
Raj Bhawan Kolkatta
Raj Bhawan Jaipur
Jantar Mantar, Delhi
New Proposal
Biogas Plant based on kitchen waste, horse dung and bio-degradable waste for lighting and illumination.
Solar LED street lights, path lights and garden lights.
SPV pumps for gardens and fountains.
Solar Steam Cooking for PBG mess.
Solar steam system for laundry. Battery vehicles to minimise vehicular pollution.
Lighting and illumination
Rashtrapati Bhawan and Jaipur column to be illuminated through LED façade lamps.
Solar trees for front courtyard and Mughal garden.
SPV LED street lights.
SPV LED garden lights in the garden and path lamps.
Replacement of mercury vapor lamps etc. with energy efficient LED/Induction lamps, with BEE.
ENERGY EFFICIENT SOLAR/ GREEN BUILDINGS
Perspective for green buildings
In India, energy demand is increasing rapidly, due to increased urbanization and better lifestyle.
Buildings are major consumers of energy, water and generate wastes.
Globally, about 40% of energy consumption and 40% of global emissions is attributed to buildings.
Green Buildings are the answer to reduce the energy consumption & control the pollution
Consume about 40% less electricity and about 50% less water through proper water conservation and waste management practices and solar passive architecture and design
GRIHA Rating for Green Building
• GRIHA (Green Rating for Integrated Sustainable Habitat), a rating system has been developed which is suitable for all types of buildings in different climatic zones of the country.
• It operates on a 100 point marking system and rates the building from 1 to 5 star with 5 star being highest.
• MNRE is promoting green buildings construction in the country and supporting GRIHA rating system through some financial incentives.
ECBC Compliance:•Insulation •High Performance glass•Controls•Efficient electrical , mechanical and lighting systemsIncremental cost: 15%Payback period < 5 yearsCompliance with GRIHA•ECBC +•Passive principles (shading, orientation, controlled glass area)•Higher indoor design conditions (higher by 1 deg C)•Optimized lighting designNo further incremental costPayback period: < 4 years
kWh/yr
Impact of GRIHAEnergy efficient building= Solar passive building + ECBC compliant
37%45%
Status of GRIHA Rating ADaRSH an independent registered society created for
promotion and implementation of GRIHA. Government decided that all new buildings of Central
Government /PSUs would be GRIHA rated (min. 3 Star). CPWD has already taken a decision to follow GRIHA
ratings in all buildings built by them. 117 projects registered for GRIHA rating certification
with 4.98 million sq. m built up area of which 81 are Government projects with 3.88 million square meter built up area.
Through capacity building over 600 professionals trained of which 115 Trainers and 92 Evaluators are further promoting green buildings/GRIHA rating in the country.
IIT KANPUR ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES BUILDING
GRIHA RATED
60% savings in energy
25% savings in water
Trees preserved and protected
Outdoor solar lights
N-S Orientation with shading (roof/window)
Lesser paving
Solar PV and Solar Thermal systems
Incremental cost 17%Energy savings 52%
Payback period :3 years
5 Star Rated GRIHA Building in IIT Kanpur
SUZLON ONE-EARTH CAMPUSPUNE, MAHARASHTRA
GRIHA RATED
56% savings in energy
50% savings in water
2,50,000 units of electricity generated annually through renewable sources of energy
NEED FOR GREEN CAMPUS Simply making green buildings would not create a green
campus it should be sustainable also. A green campus should follow the optimum path for
- land use vis-à-vis population density - Vertical or horizontal growth - Least infrastructure including pitched roads- Transport (more walkability & less use of vehicles)- Renewable energy use and Energy conservation, - Waste management and water conservation
All buildings should be green buildings with GRIHA ratings Guidelines by July end
The Upcoming Campuses
Many new educational campuses i.e, IITs, IIMs, ISERs, NITs, AIIMS, Central Universities etc. are coming up.
IITs and NITs are being built on 600-1000 acres of land.
These may not be sustainable even if they are built with green buildings due to the less population density
These should follow the optimum path of green campuses
The NIIT University, Neemrana
Built on 75 acres for 7500 students.
20 times the density of JNU and 6 times the density of IIT Delhi
Built on fallow land unusable for agriculture
Harvests rainwater by creating check dams and planting trees.
Layout designed to minimize development costs by putting students and teachers housing complexes next to the academic buildings, making the campus:
- entirely walk able with pedestrian pathways, reducing the need for motorized transport and minimizing the need for pitched road.
Has a combined system of evaporative cooling and regular air conditioning together with a system of pre-cooling fresh air by passing it through underground tunnel.
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The NIIT University, Neemrana
It provides reasonable degree of comfort in the academic buildings at low EPI(energy performance index) of 33 kWh/sq. m/year compared to 140 kWh/sq. m/year for ECBC air conditioning building.
Infrastructure costs of road and services were reduced with compact walk able campus planning.
Biogas plant at Magarpatta City, Pune
Capacity 2000 kg/day
Area 160 Sq.m
Year 2005-06
Cost 25.25 Lac
Payback 3.8 Years
Genera-tion
200 units/day
Solar Steam Generating Systems
Concentrating solar collectors produce high temperature & convert water into steam.
Use : Can supplement conventional steam systems for– Community cooking
– Industrial process heat
– Laundry
Fuel saving & payback
-100 sq. m. system costing Rs. 12- 15 lakhs can cook food for 500 people & save 5,000 liters of diesel / 600 LPG cylinders/ year
- Pays back the cost in 4 years with MNRE support
Solar Steam Cooking System at Shirdi
Comprise of 73 dishes each of 16 sq. m. area
Commissioned in July, 2009.
Meals for 20,000 people /day
Expected to save around 6,000 LPG cylinders per year
Solar Water Heating Systems
Two type of systems namely flat plate and evacuated tube collectors
Commercially viable technology
Can replace/ supplement geysers & boilers & save precious electricity & fuel oil
Helps in peak load shavings besides reducing energy bills & CO2 emissions
•
•
FPC based system
ETC based system
Solar Water Heating SystemsCost Economics
• Capacity : 100 LPD at 80 C, 2 sq. m.
solar collector area
• Installed cost : Rs. 15,000- 18,000
• Savings : - Up to 1500 units of electricity/yr depending on use
- 140 liters fuel oil /year
• Pay back : 2- 4 years with MNRE support
.
Solar Steam system at a Laundry
• • 240 sq. m. solar dish system installed at Gajraj Cleaners, Ahmed Nagar, Maharashtra for washing & cleaning
• System hooked up with existing boiler is generating about 105 kg of steam per hour at 5 kg pressure
• saving through furnace oil is around 10,000 liter/yrs
• Pay back in 4 yrs with depreciation benefit
Battery operated vehicles
Emission free mode of transportation.
Available in a number of seating capacity options.
Can operate up to 80 kms. with one charge.
Cost Rs. 3.5 to 5 lakhs.
Thank You