Monday, April 14, 2008

Stream Line, Kenya

- September 2002 -
Introduction
The absence of electric power greatly constrains a community's ability to generate income and provide local services. Decentralised energy options using local resources, such as wind, biogas, solar power and hydro power, offer many advantages for meeting the needs of rural populations. Development of one or more renewable energy options can improves both of these aspects of community life
Since the early 1990s, pico-hydro has been used to deliver electricity and mechanical power to remote mountainous areas of the world. Pico-hydro projects are hydroelectric schemes with a power generation capacity of up to 5 kilowatts (kW). The energy in water flowing down a slope is converted into electrical energy. Pico-hydro schemes have low power outputs, but require little water and are simple to install. They typically provide energy for lighting and battery charging.
Experts from the Energy Programme of ITDG East Africa, based in Kenya, in collaboration with Nottingham Trent University in the UK are working to develop the pico-hydro power sector in Kenya. The project demonstrates that pico-hydro technology is a sustainable and affordable technology for community electrification. Contributing to the establishment of hydro power infrastructure in rural Kenya and sub-Saharan Africa as a whole, the project benefits two rural communities in Kirinyaga District, central Kenya.

Water Power
The flow of water in rivers and streams is a potential source of energy. Hydro power is a very clean source of energy. It relies on a natural, non-polluting and renewable resource. Traditional water-wheels, used for providing energy for milling and pumping, have been superseded by modern turbines that are compact, highly efficient and capable of turning at high speed.
Hydro power has many advantages, including:

1. Power is usually available continuously on demand.
2. It is a concentrated energy source.
3. The energy available is predictable.
4. No fuel and limited maintenance are required, so running costs are low compared with diesel power.
5. It is a long-lasting and robust technology; systems can last for 50 years or more without major new investments.

Micro-hydro is the term used for technologies that convert energy in flowing water to direct-drive shaft power or to electricity generation on a very small scale. Ranging from a few hundred watts for battery charging or food processing applications up to 100 kW, micro-hydro provides power for small communities and rural industry in remote areas away from grid electricity. Hydro power that produces a maximum electrical output of 5 kW is called pico-hydro.

Pico-hydro Power
Recent innovations in pico-hydro technology have made it a source of power for some of the poorest and most remote regions in the world. It is a versatile power source as it can produce alternating current (AC) electricity, enabling standard appliances to be used, and it can be distributed to a whole village. It is used to power light bulbs, radios, televisions, refrigerators and food processors. It offers communities an alternative to the use of hazardous and expensive kerosene for lighting households, schools and businesses. Mechanical power can also be used with some designs to operate workshop tools and grain mills.

Pico-hydro has a number of advantages over larger systems.

-Smaller water flows are required and there are many more sites that are suitable.
-It is easier to establish and maintain agreements regarding ownership, payments, operation, maintenance and water rights, as the units only supply power for a small number of households.
-Even in countries with extensive grid electrification, pico-hydro can be suitable for the many small, remote communities for which grid extension would be extremely expensive and not practical.
-Locally manufactured systems can be produced that have much lower long- term costs per kilowatt than solar, wind and diesel systems.

Pico-hydro in Kenya
Kathamba and Thima, in the Kirinyaga District of Kenya, are the recipients of a pico-hydro scheme, the first of its kind in Africa, thanks to ITDG East Africa and Nottingham Trent University's Pico Hydro Unit. The success of the project is due to the availability of trained people and the support given by the local communities.
In Kathamba during the wet season, the spring produces 8 litres of water per second, generating approximately 1.7 kW to 2 kW of power. This is distributed to more than 30 households, with another 35 homes awaiting connection. The scheme in Thima covers 66 households. Each 'package' consists of light units and a socket for which users pay between US$55 and $75 to be connected to electricity. Fuel costs have dramatically reduced, with money saved each month on kerosene and dry cell batteries.


How Does it Work?
Water is diverted down a pipe, called the penstock, to fall through a vertical height or head, in order to gather energy. The lower end of the penstock is attached to a turbine that is turned by the energy in the falling water. As the turbine spins, it can be connected either directly to machines such as mills and presses or to a generator to provide electrical power for a small grid or battery charging. The amount of energy available is directly related to the volume of water flowing down the penstock and the height, through which it falls. The greater the volume of water and the greater the height, the more energy can be harnessed.


Figure 1. Components of a Pico-hydro System © Maher and Smith, 2001

There are eight main components to a pico-hydro system:

Water supply: The source of water is a stream or an irrigation channel. Small amounts of water can also be diverted from rivers. It is important that the source of water is reliable and not needed by anyone else. Springs make excellent sources as they do not dry up in dry weather and are usually clean, which stops silt building up in the system.

Forebay tank: Water is fed into a forebay tank. This is often enlarged to form a small reservoir. This can be useful if the water available is not enough during the dry season.


Penstock pipe: Water flows from the forebay tank or reservoir down a long pipe called the penstock. At the end of the penstock water comes out of a nozzle as a high- pressure jet. A drop or head of at least 20 metres is recommended and means that the amount of water needed to produce enough power for the basic needs of a village is quite small.


Turbine and generator: The power in the jet, or hydro power, is transmitted to a turbine runner that changes it into mechanical power. The runner has blades or buckets that cause it to rotate when struck by the water. The turbine is a general name that refers to the runner, nozzle and surrounding case. The runner typically spins 1500 times every minute. The turbine is attached to a generator. This converts rotating power into electrical power. This is how water flowing in a small stream can become electricity.


A pico generator

Electronic controller: An electronic controller is connected to the generator. This matches the electrical power that is produced to the electrical loads that are connected, and stops the voltage from changing as devices are switched on and off.


An electronic load controller

Mechanical load: The mechanical load is a machine connected to the turbine shaft using a pulley system so that power can be drawn directly from the turbine. The rotating force of the turbine runner can be used to turn equipment such as grain mills or woodwork machinery. Approximately 10 per cent of the mechanical power is lost in the pulley system but it is still an efficient way of using the power as none is lost in the generator or electric motor.

Distribution system: The distribution system connects the electricity supply from the generator to the houses or schools. This is often one of the most expensive parts of the system.

Electrical loads: Electrical loads are usually connected inside houses. This is a general name given to any device that uses the electricity generated. The type of loads connected to a pico-hydro scheme depends largely on the amount of power generated. Using the power wisely can add more benefits. Special lights such a fluorescent bulbs, for example, use less power and so more lights can be connected to the same generator.
After passing through the whole system, water is normally returned to a stream or river below the powerhouse.


Planning a Pico-hydro Scheme :

It is important to conduct a feasibility study in a proposed area to determine what is required to implement a pico-hydro project for village electrification.

Overview: Establish the demand, willingness to pay, local ability to manage a scheme, and grid electricity available or planned.

Location: A suitable geographical location for a pico-hydro scheme is one with steep rivers that have an all-year flow.

Demand survey: Estimate the number of houses within 1km (approximately two- thirds of a mile) from the water supply and those who are willing to pay. A 1km radius is the distance that electricity can most easily be transmitted.

Power estimate: The head and flow rate should both be measured to determine the possible power output and to help in choosing equipment.

Cost and availability: Estimate the size of generator needed to meet the energy demand, based on the head, flow and power outputs of available equipment. Typically, the higher the head the lower the cost per installed kilowatt. A typical system may cost approximately US$3,000 per kilowatt. The initial investment is high, but running costs, mostly maintenance, are low because there is no need to buy fuel.

Viability: Comparing the likely annual income with capital cost gives a rough guide to financial viability. If the annual income is less than 10 per cent of the capital cost, the project is not viable. If it is 10–25 per cent the scheme could be possible. If the annual income is more than 25 per cent, then the scheme is viable.

Head and flow: Decide on a suitable combination of head and flow to produce the required power. Assumptions should be made on the system efficiency, but if in doubt, assume an overall efficiency (water power to electrical power) of 45 per cent.

Village meeting: Present the findings of the survey to the community at an open meeting. Local government staff and local development organisations should be encouraged to attend.

Other steps: A number of other steps need to be taken, including a detailed site survey, finalising power output, producing a scale map and scheme layout, a detailed costing, consumer contracts for electricity supply and organising finance. Once this has been done the scheme can get under way. Ordering materials, installation and training can all be undertaken.

How to calculate power and efficiency

The pico-hydro project in Kenya has proven that this technology is both sustainable and affordable. Utilising a small spring to generate electricity, the communities of Kathamba and Thima now watch TV, listen to the radio and children can do homework at night knowing this technology is environmentally friendly. Money saved on buying kerosene and batteries can be used for other things, including children's education.

All photos © ITDG/Zul

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Microhydro Electricity Basics

Waterfall

Hydropower is based on simple concepts. Moving water turns a turbine, the turbine spins a generator, and electricity is produced. Many other components may be in a system, but it all begins with the energy already within the moving water.

Water power is the combination of head and flow. Both must be present to produce electricity. Consider a typical hydro system. Water is diverted from a stream into a pipeline, where it is directed downhill and through the turbine (flow). The vertical drop (head) creates pressure at the bottom end of the pipeline. The pressurized water emerging from the end of the pipe creates the force that drives the turbine. More flow or more head produces more electricity. Electrical power output will always be slightly less than water power input due to turbine and system inefficiencies.

Head is water pressure, which is created by the difference in elevation between the water intake and the turbine. Head can be expressed as vertical distance (feet or meters), or as pressure, such as pounds per square inch (psi). Net head is the pressure available at the turbine when water is flowing, which will always be less than the pressure when the water is turned off (static head), due to the friction between the water and the pipe. Pipeline diameter has an effect on net head.

Flow is water quantity, and is expressed as "volume per time," such as gallons per minute (gpm), cubic feet per second (cfs), or liters per minute (lpm). Design flow is the maximum flow for which your hydro system is designed. It will likely be less than the maximum flow of your stream (especially during the rainy season), more than your minimum flow, and a compromise between potential electrical output and system cost.


Measuring Head & Flow

Before you can begin designing your hydro system or estimating how much electricity it will produce, you´ll need to make four essential measurements:

• Head (the vertical distance between the intake and turbine)
• Flow (how much water comes down the stream)
• Pipeline (penstock) length
• Electrical transmission line length (from turbine to home or battery bank)

Head and flow are the two most important facts you need to know about your hydro site. You simply cannot move forward without these measurements. Your site´s head and flow will determine everything about your hydro system—pipeline size, turbine type, rotational speed, and generator size. Even rough cost estimates will be impossible until you´ve measured head and flow.

When measuring head and flow, keep in mind that accuracy is important. Inaccurate measurements can result in a hydro system designed to the wrong specs, and one that produces less electricity at a greater expense.

Stream Illustration

See also the following Home Power feature articles:

Microhydro-Electric Systems Simplified
Intro to Hydropower—Part 1: Systems Overview
Intro to Hydropower—Part 2: Measuring Head & Flow
Intro to Hydropower—Part 3: Power, Efficiency, Transmission & Equipment Selection

Microhydro-Electric System Types

Off-Grid Battery-Based Microhydro-Electric Systems

Most small off-grid hydro systems are battery-based. Battery systems have great flexibility and can be combined with other energy sources, such as wind generators and solar-electric arrays, if your stream is seasonal. Because stream flow is usually consistent, battery charging is as well, and it´s often possible to use a relatively small battery bank. Instantaneous demand (watts) will be limited not by the water potential or turbine, but by the size of the inverter.

The following illustration includes the primary components of any off-grid battery-based microhydro-electric system. See our Microhydro-Electric System Components section for an introduction to the function(s) of each component.


See also the following Home Power feature articles:

Hydro New England Style


Off-Grid Batteryless Microhydro-Electric Systems

If your stream has enough potential, you may decide to go with an AC-direct system. This consists of a turbine generator that produces AC output at 120 or 240 volts, which can be sent directly to standard household loads. The system is controlled by diverting energy in excess of load requirements to dump loads, such as water- or air-heating elements. This technique keeps the total load on the generator constant. A limitation of these systems is that the peak or surge loads cannot exceed the output of the generator, which is determined by the stream´s available head and flow. This type of system needs to be large to meet peak electrical loads, so it can often generate enough energy for all household needs, including water and space heating.

The following illustration includes the primary components of any off-grid batteryless microhydro-electric system. See our Microhydro-Electric System Components section for an introduction to the function(s) of each component.



Grid-Tied Batteryless Microhydro-Electric Systems

Systems of this type use a turbine and controls to produce electricity that can be fed directly into utility lines. These can use either AC or DC generators. AC systems will use AC generators to sync directly with the grid. An approved interface device is needed to prevent the system from energizing the grid when the grid is out of action and under repair. DC systems will use a specific inverter to convert the output of a DC hydro turbine to grid-synchronous AC. The biggest drawback of batteryless systems is that when the utility is down, your electricity will be out too. When the grid fails, these systems are designed to automatically shut down.

The following illustration includes the primary components of any grid-tied batteryless microhydro-electric system. See our Microhydro-Electric System Components section for an introduction to the function(s) of each component.


See also the following Home Power feature articles:

Powerful Dreams—Crown Hill Farm´s Hydro-Electric Plant

Microhydro-Electric System Components

Understanding the basic components of an RE system and how they function is not an overwhelming task. Here are some brief descriptions of the common equipment used in grid-intertied and off-grid microhydro-electric systems. Systems vary—not all equipment is necessary for every system type.

Intake
Pipeline
Turbine
Controls
Dump Load
Battery Bank
Metering
Main DC Disconnect
Inverter
AC Breaker Panel
Kilowatt-Hour Meter


IntakeIntake
AKA: screen, diversion, impoundment

Intakes can be as simple as a screened box submerged in the watercourse, or they can involve a complete damming of the stream. The goal is to divert debris- and air-free water into a pipeline. Effectively getting the water into the system´s pipeline is a critical issue that often does not get enough attention. Poorly designed intakes often become the focus of maintenance and repair efforts for hydro-electric systems.

A large pool of water at the intake will not increase the output of the turbine, nor will it likely provide useful storage, but it will allow the water to calm so debris can sink or float. An intake that is above the bottom of the pool, but below the surface, will avoid the grit on the stream bottom and most of the floating debris on top. Another way to remove debris is to direct the water over a sloped screen. The turbine´s water falls through, and debris passes with the overflow water.


Pipeline
AKA: Penstock

Most hydro turbines require at least a short run of pipe to bring the water to the machine, and some turbines require piping to move water away from it. The length can vary widely depending on the distance between the source and the turbine. The pipeline´s diameter may range from 1 inch to 1 foot or more, and must be large enough to handle the design flow. Losses due to friction need to be minimized to maximize the energy available for conversion into electricity. Plastic in the form of polyethylene or PVC is the usual choice for home-scale systems. Burying the pipeline is desirable to prevent freezing in extremely cold climates, to keep the pipe from shifting, and to protect it from damage (cows, bears, etc.) and ultraviolet (UV) light degradation.


TurbineTurbine
AKA: Waterwheel

The turbine converts the energy in the water into electricity. Many types of turbines are available, so it is important to match the machine to the site´s conditions of head and flow.

In impulse turbines, the water is routed through nozzles that direct the water at some type of runner or wheel (Pelton and Turgo are two common types). Reaction turbines are propeller machines and centrifugal pumps used as turbines, where the runner is submerged within a closed housing. With either turbine type, the energy of the falling water is converted into rotary motion in the runner´s shaft. This shaft is coupled directly or belted to either a permanent magnet alternator, or a "synchronous" or induction AC generator.


ControlsController
AKA: Charge controller, controller, regulator

The function of a charge controller in a hydro system is equivalent to turning on a load to absorb excess energy. Battery-based microhydro systems require charge controllers to prevent overcharging the batteries. Controllers generally send excess energy to a secondary (dump) load, such as an air or water heater. Unlike a solar-electric controller, a microhydro system controller does not disconnect the turbine from the batteries. This could create voltages that are higher than some components can withstand, or cause the turbine to overspeed, which could result in dangerous and damaging overvoltages.

Off-grid, batteryless AC-direct microhydro systems need controls too. A load-control governor monitors the voltage or frequency of the system, and keeps the generator correctly loaded, turning dump-load capacity on and off as the load pattern changes, or mechanically deflects water away from the runner. Grid-tied batteryless AC and DC systems also need controls to protect the system if the utility grid fails.

See also the following Home Power feature articles:

Under Control: Charge Controllers for Whole-House Systems
What is a Charge Controller?
Get Maximum Power From Your Solar Panels with MPPT
What The Heck? Charge Controller


Dump LoadDump Load 1Dump Load 2
AKA: diversion load, shunt load

A dump load is an electrical resistance heater that must be sized to handle the full generating capacity of the microhydro turbine. Dump loads can be air or water heaters, and are activated by the charge controller whenever the batteries or the grid cannot accept the energy being produced, to prevent damage to the system. Excess energy is "shunted" to the dump load when necessary.


Battery BankBattery Bank
AKA: storage battery

By using reversible chemical reactions, a battery bank provides a way to store surplus energy when more is being produced than consumed. When demand increases beyond what is generated, the batteries can be called on to release energy to keep your household loads operating.

A microhydro system is typically the most gentle of the RE systems on the batteries, since they do not often remain in a discharged state. The bank can also be smaller than for a wind or PV system. One or two days of storage is usually sufficient. Deep-cycle lead-acid batteries are typically used in these systems. They are cost effective and do not usually account for a large percentage of the system cost.

See also the following Home Power feature articles:

Top 10 Battery Blunders and How to Avoid Them
Flooded Lead-Acid Battery Maintenance
Battery Box Basics


MeteringMetering
AKA: battery monitor, amp-hour meter, watt-hour meter

System meters measure and display several different aspects of your microhydro-electric system´s performance and status—tracking how full your battery bank is, how much electricity your turbine is producing or has produced, and how much electricity is being used. Operating your system without metering is like running your car without any gauges—although possible to do, it´s always better to know how well the car is operating and how much fuel is in the tank.

See also the following Home Power feature articles:

The Whole Picture: Computer-Based Solutions for PV System Monitoring
Mutichannel Metering: Beta-Testing a New System Monitor
Control Your Energy Use & Costs with Solar Monitoring


Main DC DisconnectMain DC Disconnect
AKA: battery/inverter disconnect

In battery-based systems, a disconnect between the batteries and inverter is required. This disconnect is typically a large, DC-rated breaker mounted in a sheet-metal enclosure. It allows the inverter to be disconnected from the batteries for service, and protects the inverter-to-battery wiring against electrical faults.

See also the following Home Power feature articles:

What The Heck? Disconnect


InverterBattery-Based Inverter
AKA: DC-to-AC converter

Inverters transform the DC electricity stored in your battery bank into AC electricity for powering household appliances. Grid-tied inverters synchronize the system´s output with the utility´s AC electricity, allowing the system to feed hydro-electricity to the utility grid. Battery-based inverters for off-grid or grid-tied systems often include a battery charger, which is capable of charging a battery bank from either the grid or a backup generator if your creek isn´t flowing or your system is down for maintenance.

In rare cases, an inverter and battery bank are used with larger, off-grid AC-direct systems to increase power availability. The inverter uses the AC to charge the batteries, and synchronizes with the hydro-electric AC supply to supplement it when demand is greater than the output of the hydro generator.

See also the following Home Power feature articles:

What’s Going On—The Grid? A New Generation of Grid-Tied PV Inverters
Off-Grid Inverter Efficiency


AC Breaker PanelAC Breaker Panel
AKA: mains panel, breaker box, service entrance

The AC breaker panel, or mains panel, is the point at which all of a home´s electrical wiring meets with the provider of the electricity, whether that´s the grid or a microhydro-electric system. This wall-mounted panel or box is usually installed in a utility room, basement, garage, or on the exterior of a building. It contains a number of labeled circuit breakers that route electricity to the various rooms throughout a house. These breakers allow electricity to be disconnected for servicing, and also protect the building´s wiring against electrical fires.

Just like the electrical circuits in your home or office, a grid-tied inverter´s electrical output needs to be routed through an AC circuit breaker. This breaker is usually mounted inside the building´s mains panel. It enables the inverter to be disconnected from either the grid or from electrical loads if servicing is necessary. The breaker also safeguards the circuit´s electrical wiring.


Kilowatt-Hour MeterKilowatt-Hour Meter
AKA: KWH meter, utility meter

Most homes with grid-tied microhydro-electric systems will have AC electricity both coming from and going to the utility grid. A multichannel KWH meter keeps track of how much grid electricity you´re using and how much your RE system is producing. The utility company often provides intertie-capable meters at no cost.

-By Paul Cunningham & Ian Woofenden

micro-hydro power plant

The Border Green Energy Team (BGET) provides hands-on appropriate technology training and financial support to village innovators in ethnic minority areas on both sides of the Thai/Burma border.


Waterfall

School in need of electricity

Students

Preparing reservoir

Working on dam

Everybody works

More sandbags

Piping water from good height to get good pressure

Good effort

Pressure, OK?

Let's build a POWER HOUSE

Preparing cement

For the turbine

Break time

Power Hut may be

Here comes the water

Into the turbine

Where is the manual?

Water comes in; Water goes out and in between ....

The truth: Voltage meter and Current meter

Controller

Controller

Looking good

Cable works for distribution

No sagging cables

Higher

One village at a time

Bright class-room



Friday, April 11, 2008

Bir Bahadur Ghale


Bir Bahadur Ghale
Country: Nepal
Region: Asia
Field Of Work: Economic Development
Subsectors: Appropriate Technology,
Rural Development
Target Populations: Businesses,
Communities
Organization: Nepal Micro-Hydro Entrepreneur's Federation
Year Elected: 2004

This profile was prepared when Bir Bahadur Ghale was elected to the Ashoka Fellowship in 2004.
Villages in the highest altitudes of the Himalayan Mountains face isolation and economic stagnation. As a result, they lose dozens of young people every year to increasingly crowded urban areas. Bir Bahadur Ghale electrifies these villages with a small hydropower plant and helps them attract new business ventures that stimulate their economies and draw young people back to their communities.

The New Idea:
The best way to stem the tide of people leaving remote villages is to fill those villages with energy and opportunity. Bir Bahadur Ghale accomplishes this by constructing micro-hydropower plants, just large enough to light a town and support a wave of new businesses. In linking sustainable power generation to industrial and commercial ventures, he creates jobs that enable villagers to buy electricity and revive their failing villages.

As he builds micropower plants throughout Nepal, Bir Bahadur makes sure that each one has the support it needs to run smoothly. On a practical level, he establishes district service centers to answer technical questions and make needed repairs. To support power management, he has founded the Nepal Micro-Hydropower Entrepreneurship Federation, connecting hundreds of plant managers to trainings and idea exchanges, and uniting them to advocate for rural development in national policy.


The Problem:
The rural villages and towns of Nepal have almost no access to electricity. While the national power grid covers much of the plains and urban areas of the country, it does not yet reach these communities, home to more than 85 percent of Nepal’s population. The absence of a managed power source in these communities makes commercial or industrial ventures impossible on all but the most limited of scales. With little access to urban economies, rural families survive on meager subsistence farming.

Nepal’s intricate network of steep rivers and streams makes hydropower a solution with excellent potential for addressing rural energy needs. Legislation supporting micro-hydropower projects raised hopes for new progress in rural electrification during the 1980s. Nearly 1,400 micro-hydropower plants have been established since then, but many are now on the verge of closure due to improper management and technical failures. Negligence and lack of long-term planning have kept hydropower from meeting its great potential, wasting valuable and scarce resources on power projects that are never used.

Without power, opportunity for social and economic advancement remains outside the reach of most rural residents. The situation pushes rural villagers to move away from their homes, searching for work in urban areas and other countries. The result has been a mass exodus that strains the resources of cities as it tears the social fabric of rural communities.


The Strategy:
In 1991, Bir Bahadur built a micro-hydropower plant in his hometown of Barpak, providing enough power to electrify every household in the village. He spent weeks convincing his neighbors of the benefits of electricity, preparing the way for a remarkably quick expansion of his power network. The laborers who built the plant, mostly from poor families, were the first to have electric light. Bir Bahadur and his team lit the streets a few weeks later, and within months allowed electric access to the great majority of farms and houses of the village. For every household in the village, electricity gave cheaper, easier and cleaner lighting than old kerosene lamps.

Bir Bahadur tied his energy generation closely to the development of industrial and commercial ventures in the village. He attracted outside businessmen and trained local entrepreneurs to use electricity to spur economic growth. A paper business, a saw mill, and a furniture factory all emerged and provided new employment for the young people of the village. Bir Bahadur recruited investors to establish a bakery that provided fresh bread at a cheaper rate than villagers had previously paid for two-day-old bread brought from the nearest settlement. With these successes, migration away from the village decreased, and many people who had previously moved to the cities came back to join their families.

Encouraged by the rapid growth of his network in Barpak, Bir Bahadur quickly adapted his methods to serve other communities. He designed feasibility studies and outreach programs to inform villagers about the benefits of electricity for home use, and about the business opportunities that electricity can support. The programs were effective; over the past decade he has led the construction of 22 hydropower plants in five districts across Nepal. He founded the Barpak Service Center to give technical advice, perform needed repairs, and generally keep the plants running smoothly.

Bir Bahadur has partnered his plant construction projects with ropeways that can carry needed goods up the steep Himalayan slopes that separate rural villages. His first ropeway, connecting Barpak to the markets of Rangrung, greatly reduced the time that villagers had to spend carrying basic necessities to their town; trips that used to take 5 hours now take only 20 minutes. Bir Bahadur sees a great potential for ropeways in the mountainous terrain of Nepal, and plans to expand them to transport people soon. The triple partnership of hydropower plants, new business ventures and ropeways has opened tremendous possibilities for improving quality of life in rural communities.

To help other hydropower advocates achieve similar success, Bir Bahadur established the Nepal Micro-Hydropower Entrepreneurship Federation in 2002. Where the 1,400 micro-hydropower plants spread across Nepal have traditionally struggled with technical and management problems, the federation provides a common platform for sharing experiences and solutions. It unites its members in the common purpose of developing community-owned, independent sources of energy for rural villages and towns. Experienced entrepreneurs help spread awareness of hydropower and support new communities as they launch their own projects. In the process, they train newer network members to take leadership roles in their home districts. As federation members gain experience, Bir Bahadur helps them lobby the government for policy level changes, specifically advocating clear rules for micro-hydropower users and investors.

Bir Bahadur has set an ambitious goal for his federation: to bring electricity to all eligible villages in Nepal by 2014. His work has already spread to all fifteen villages in the district of Gorkha, as well as towns in five other districts. He sees a logical and simple next step to spread his model throughout Nepal, and to neighboring countries with similar terrain.


The Person:
Bir Bahadur Ghale is from the village of Barpak in the Gorkha district, with a population of approximately 6,000 people. Agriculture is the mainstay of the Barpak economy, and those males who do not pursue agriculture often join the armed forces of India, Singapore, and Britain (which once included service in Hong Kong). Bir Bahadur resolved from an early age to follow a different career path. He attended high school in Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, but always aspired to return and contribute to the development of his hometown.

In 1986 Bir Bahadur went on a trip to Hong Kong. He was dazzled by the cosmopolitan city and noticed how vital an influence electricity had on the way of life there. Hong Kong was driven by electricity. The underground metro, the tramway, cable cars, elevators—almost everything was powered by electricity. He imagined how life in Hong Kong would change if electricity ceased to exist. The bustling city would tear apart. He thus realized that electricity is a critical commodity.

While working as a petty contractor for the construction of a highway in 1989, Bir Bahadur stopped by a village hotel, noticing to his surprise that in the middle of the mountains this hotel had working electric power. Investigating, he found that the energy came from a simple water turbine at a nearby mill. He thought of his home village, 1,900 meters high in the mountains, a two- to three-day walk from the nearest settlement. Without power, his neighbors lived a difficult life cut off from the basic amenities and infrastructure available to city residents. Facing many challenges, he built and established the 50-kilowatt micro-hydropower plant in his village in 1991. The plant was small, but it was enough to light all households in Barpak village. Since then, through combining demand-driven electricity generation with ropeway transportation, he has transformed the economy of the village. This process has provided new alternatives for the youth of his town, and for the future of rural communities in general.
source:http://ashoka.org/node/2750

Picture worth 1000 words









source:http://www.rise.org.au/info/Tech/hydro/large.html