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Using solar PV and stationary storage to buffer the impact of electric minibus charging in grid-constrained sub-Saharan Africa

  • Despite the unstoppable global drive towards electric mobility, the electrification of sub-Saharan Africa’s ubiquitous informal multi-passenger minibus taxis raises substantial concerns. This is due to a constrained electricity system, both in terms of generation capacity and distribution networks. Without careful planning and mitigation, the additional load of charging hundreds of thousands of electric minibus taxis during peak demand times could prove catastrophic. This paper assesses the impact of charging 202 of these taxis in Johannesburg, South Africa. The potential of using external stationary battery storage and solar PV generation is assessed to reduce both peak grid demand and total energy drawn from the grid. With the addition of stationary battery storage of an equivalent of 60 kWh/taxi and a solar plant of an equivalent of 9.45 kWpk/taxi, the grid load impact is reduced by 66%, from 12 kW/taxi to 4 kW/taxi, and the daily grid energy by 58% from 87 kWh/taxi to 47 kWh/taxi. The country’s dependence on coal to generate electricity, including the solar PV supply, also reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 58%.

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Metadaten
Author of HS ReutlingenFüßl, Larissa; Thomas, Bernd
URN:urn:nbn:de:bsz:rt2-opus4-48671
DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/en17020457
ISSN:1996-1073
Erschienen in:Energies
Publisher:MDPI
Place of publication:Basel
Document Type:Journal article
Language:English
Publication year:2024
Tag:PV; battery storage; electric minibus taxi; grid impact; paratransit; solar power
Volume:17
Issue:2
Page Number:18
First Page:1
Last Page:18
Article Number:457
DDC classes:620 Ingenieurwissenschaften und Maschinenbau
Open access?:Ja
Licence (German):License Logo  Creative Commons - CC BY - Namensnennung 4.0 International