• Last Update 2024-07-07 13:46:00

Home solar power to be connected to national grid

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The Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL), the power regulator, has ordered the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) and Lanka Electricity Company Pvt Ltd (LECO) to connect domestic rooftop solar plants to the national grid within two weeks from the date of application.
“The direction to provide the connection for rooftop solar plants to the national grid in an efficient manner within a timeframe will encourage people to move to solar power,” Damitha Kumarasinghe, Director General of Public Utilites Commission of Sri Lanka said in a media statement on Wednesday.
Sri Lanka aims to add 200 MW of solar electricity to the national grid by 2020 and 1000 MW by the year 2025.
The PUCSL has asked CEB and LECO to ensure completion of the grid connection and signing the Net metering, Net accounting or Net Plus agreements within the below mentioned time frame:
a) Maximum acceptable time to provide the estimate for net meter installation shall be one week from the date of submission of the duly filled net metering application with the relevant application fee, and
b) Maximum acceptable time to provide net meter installation and grid connection with signing the agreement shall be one week from receiving the payment for net meter installation.
“Among the non- conventional renewable energy (NCRE) sources, Rooftop solar PV considered as one of the fastest technologies to install and integrate into the grid. Government’s ‘Soorya Bala Sangramaya (energy battle)’ programme is one strategy to support future energy requirement. So far Sri Lanka has added about 42 MW of capacity to the national grid through domestic rooftop solar plants by the end of 2016,” Mr. Kumarasinghe added.
Sri Lanka has 7904 domestic rooftop solar plants that are installed and connected to the national grid, data up to Novemeber 2016 reveals.
This includes 256 rooftop solar plants in Southern province, 4806  plants in Western province, 184 plants in Central province, 105 plants in Sabaragamuwa province, 249 plants in North Western province, 98 plants in North Central, 1707 plants in Northen province, 32 plants in Uva province and 73 solar plants in Eastern province.
The Government policy is to increase the existing 50 per cent of the electricity generation based on the renewable energy sources to 60 per cent by 2020 and to increase it further up to 70 per cent by  2030 and to generate the total energy requirement through renewable and other indigenous energy resources by 2050. - ENDS -

 

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