Analyzing technical and financial benefits of investing in solar plus battery hybrid plants to replace new or aging fossil power plants.
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The increasing environmental impact of entirely fossil fuel-based power generation, rising
fuel tariffs, and growing power conservation concerns have multiplied the worldwide
transition to renewable power system. In Bangladesh, electricity generation is based closely
on getting traditional fossil fuel like natural gas, oil, and coal. This paper addresses the
alternative of three distributed fossil fuel generators supplying industrial electricity by
designing a grid-interactive PV–battery energy system (BESS). In MATLAB/Simulink a 60 kW
PV-based prototype system was first designed to observe power electronic performance,
battery charging and discharging behavior, voltage regulation, reactive and active power,
and system stability under real-time irradiance profile and load conditions. The equivalent
hybrid system was then optimized within the NREL REopt platform to evaluate fossil fuel
displacement, where it was modified to serve the same commercial load currently fed
through three generators. Eleven scenarios representing specific plan cost structures,
flexibility requirements, and deployment assumptions were analyzed to determine the
most optimal appliance sizes, renewable energy penetration, and life-cycle economics. The
results show that the designed solar PV–BESS equipment can reliably upgrade fossil fuel
generators to maintain continuous energy supply, realize near-perfect renewable energy
penetration, reduce operating cost and emissions, and transform the levelized cost of
energy. The precise low-cost regional scenario in 2030 resulted in a first-class overall
performance, resulting in almost 100% renewable energy supply with a predicted LCOE of
almost 0.0357 USD/kWh. Overall, the findings show that the proposed PV–BESS hybrid
equipment can successfully replace the current distributed fossil fuel generation with a
technically robust and economically feasible renewable energy alternative.
