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An Assessment of the Small Hydro Potential of Opeki River, Southwestern Nigeria

Received: 23 May 2014     Accepted: 16 June 2014     Published: 30 June 2014
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Abstract

Nigeria faces an acute shortage of electricity supply and large rural populations have no access to electricity. In this work, the small hydro potential of Opeki River in southwestern Nigeria was assessed. Mean daily flow records for seven years were used to establish a flow duration curve (FDC) for the river and a medium range of heads was evaluated. Conventional power equations were adopted and modified to determine rated output (Pk), annual optimal operation period (To) and to derive power duration curve (PDC) for a proposed plant at the site of interest. The plant’s annual energy production (Ek) and capacity factor (C) were projected from the PDC. At a net head of 46.5 m, an assessment at average potential power (Pave) with a single Kaplan turbine obtained values of Pk, To, Ek and C as 8.8 MW, 148 days, 50,018 MWh, and 65.1% respectively. Assessment results showed that small hydro electric power generation from Opeki River would improve electricity supply to nearby, off - grid rural communities.

Published in Science Journal of Energy Engineering (Volume 2, Issue 3)
DOI 10.11648/j.sjee.20140203.12
Page(s) 25-31
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2014. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Hydraulic Turbines, Opeki River, Small Hydro Power

References
[1] IEA - International Energy Agency, "Access to Electricity," Report, Published by the International Energy Agency, Paris, France, 2012. http://www.iea.org/ weo/ electricity.asp
[2] Rosnes, O. and Vennemo, H., "Powering Up: Costing Power Infrastructure Spending Needs in Sub-Saharan Africa", African Infrastructure Country Diagnostic (AICD) Background Paper Number 5, World Bank, Washington, DC, USA, 2008.
[3] Sambo, S. A., "Renewable Energy for Rural Development: The Nigerian Perspective," ISESCO Science and Technology Vision, Volume 1, ISESCO - Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Rabat, Kingdom of Morocco, 2005. pp. 12 - 22
[4] Kaunda, C., Kimambo, C. and Nielsen, T., "Potential of Small - Scale Hydropower for Electricity Generation in Sub - Saharan Africa", ISRN Renewable Energy Journal, Volume 2012, Hindawi, New York, USA, 2012. pp. 1 - 15
[5] Ekpo, E. I., "Challenges of Hydro Power Development in Nigeria," Paper Number. 262, Hydro Vision 2008 Conference, 14th – 18th July 2008, Sacramento, California, USA, 2008
[6] Zarma, H. I., "Hydro Power Resources in Nigeria: A Country Position Paper," 2nd Hydro Power for Today Conference 2006, IC - SHP - International Centre on Small Hydro Power, Hangzhou, China, 2006.
[7] Boluwade, A., "Model-ing Opeki River Flow for Sustainable Rural Develop-ment," in Proceedings of 29th WEDC International Con-ference: Towards the Millennium Development Goals – Actions for Water and Environmental Sanitation, WEDC – Water Engineering and Development Center, Abuja, Nigeria, September; 2003.pp. 1 - 3 http://www.lboro.ac.uk/resou rces /confer ences/29/alaba/pdf
[8] Basnyat, D., "Fundamentals of Small Hydro Power Technologies", Financing Cogene-ration and Small - Hydro Projects in the Sugar and Tea Industry in East and Southern Africa Training, 19th - 23rd June 2006, Nairobi, Kenya. ADB FINESSE Training Course on Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency for Poverty Reduction; 2006, pp. 5 - 36
[9] BHA - British Hy-dropower Association, "A Guide to United Kingdom Mini – Hydro Developments", Version 1.2, London, United Kingdom, 2005. http://www.british-hydro.org/Useful20%Information/A20%Guide20%to20%UK20%mini-hydro20%develop ment20%v3.pdf
[10] Natural Resources, Canada. "Small Hydro Project Analysis Chapter, RETScreen Engi-neering and Cases Textbook", Published by Natural Re-sources Canada. Ottawa, Canada, Catalogue No. M39 – 38/2003E – PDF, 2004.
[11] ESHA - European Small Hydropower Association, "Guide on How to Develop a Small Hydropower Plant", ESHA, Brussels, Belgium, 2004. http://www.esha.be/fileadmin/esha_files/documents/publications/GUIDES/GUIDE_SHP/GUIDE_SHP_EN. pdf.
[12] Copestake, P. and Young, A., "How Much Water Can a River Give? Uncertainty and the Flow Dura-tion Curve", British Hydrological Society (BHS), 10th Na-tional Hydrology Symposium, Exeter, United Kingdom, 2002.
[13] Oregon State University, “Analysis Tech-niques: Flow Duration Tutorial”, In Stream Flow Evalua-tions for Watershed Restoration Planning and De-sign,2005.http://www.water.oregonstate.edu/streamflow/index.html
[14] Rajput, R. K., "A Textbook of Power Plant Engineering". Laxmi Publications Limited, New Delhi, India, 2008. pp. 22 - 28
[15] Kendall, A., "An Introduction to Numerical Analysis", 2nd Edition, John Wiley and Sons Inc., New York, USA, 1989. pp. 37 - 45
[16] Penche, C., "Layman’s Guide on How to De-velop a Small Hydro Site" 2nd Edition, Directorate - Gen-eral for Energy, Commission of European Communities, Brussels, Belgium, 1998.
Cite This Article
  • APA Style

    Dele Innocent Shobayo, Isaiah Adediji Adejumobi, Olufriopo Samson Awokola, Adio Taofiki Akinwale. (2014). An Assessment of the Small Hydro Potential of Opeki River, Southwestern Nigeria. Science Journal of Energy Engineering, 2(3), 25-31. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjee.20140203.12

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    ACS Style

    Dele Innocent Shobayo; Isaiah Adediji Adejumobi; Olufriopo Samson Awokola; Adio Taofiki Akinwale. An Assessment of the Small Hydro Potential of Opeki River, Southwestern Nigeria. Sci. J. Energy Eng. 2014, 2(3), 25-31. doi: 10.11648/j.sjee.20140203.12

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    AMA Style

    Dele Innocent Shobayo, Isaiah Adediji Adejumobi, Olufriopo Samson Awokola, Adio Taofiki Akinwale. An Assessment of the Small Hydro Potential of Opeki River, Southwestern Nigeria. Sci J Energy Eng. 2014;2(3):25-31. doi: 10.11648/j.sjee.20140203.12

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  • @article{10.11648/j.sjee.20140203.12,
      author = {Dele Innocent Shobayo and Isaiah Adediji Adejumobi and Olufriopo Samson Awokola and Adio Taofiki Akinwale},
      title = {An Assessment of the Small Hydro Potential of Opeki River, Southwestern Nigeria},
      journal = {Science Journal of Energy Engineering},
      volume = {2},
      number = {3},
      pages = {25-31},
      doi = {10.11648/j.sjee.20140203.12},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjee.20140203.12},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.sjee.20140203.12},
      abstract = {Nigeria faces an acute shortage of electricity supply and large rural populations have no access to electricity. In this work, the small hydro potential of Opeki River in southwestern Nigeria was assessed. Mean daily flow records for seven years were used to establish a flow duration curve (FDC) for the river and a medium range of heads was evaluated. Conventional power equations were adopted and modified to determine rated output (Pk), annual optimal operation period (To) and to derive power duration curve (PDC) for a proposed plant at the site of interest. The plant’s annual energy production (Ek) and capacity factor (C) were projected from the PDC. At a net head of 46.5 m, an assessment at average potential power (Pave) with a single Kaplan turbine obtained values of Pk, To, Ek and C as 8.8 MW, 148 days, 50,018 MWh, and 65.1% respectively. Assessment results showed that small hydro electric power generation from Opeki River would improve electricity supply to nearby, off - grid rural communities.},
     year = {2014}
    }
    

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    AU  - Isaiah Adediji Adejumobi
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    AB  - Nigeria faces an acute shortage of electricity supply and large rural populations have no access to electricity. In this work, the small hydro potential of Opeki River in southwestern Nigeria was assessed. Mean daily flow records for seven years were used to establish a flow duration curve (FDC) for the river and a medium range of heads was evaluated. Conventional power equations were adopted and modified to determine rated output (Pk), annual optimal operation period (To) and to derive power duration curve (PDC) for a proposed plant at the site of interest. The plant’s annual energy production (Ek) and capacity factor (C) were projected from the PDC. At a net head of 46.5 m, an assessment at average potential power (Pave) with a single Kaplan turbine obtained values of Pk, To, Ek and C as 8.8 MW, 148 days, 50,018 MWh, and 65.1% respectively. Assessment results showed that small hydro electric power generation from Opeki River would improve electricity supply to nearby, off - grid rural communities.
    VL  - 2
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Author Information
  • Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria

  • Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria

  • Department of Civil Engineering, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria

  • Department of Computer Science, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria

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