Celebrating solar power with Rai expedition guide JB in front of the Exodus Solar cooker at North Face Lodge in Lukla |
For Phase II of our National Geographic/Blackstone Ranch Foundation/Mountain Institute high altitude environment conservation project we trekked from Lukla through the Hinku valley
up to the base of Mera Peak in the village of Khare. The route took us to the following locations: Chuthanga
(3175m) to Zatrawala Pass (4,610m) to Zatrabok-4,704m, to Kothe (3800m) to
Thangnak (4600m) to Khare (5000m).
One of our goals was to evaluate awareness of and assess the
potential for alternative energy systems that can offset and reduce the use of
firewood and kerosene (the two major fuels used since the juniper shrub
conservation effort began). What we found was consistent with what we had
observed in the Khumbu valley the previous year: almost universal use of small
photovoltaics systems for lighting (averaging 25 watts per household or lodge)
but almost no substitutes for the wood and fossil fuels. The exception to this
were the presence of 4 solar cookers, two in Thangnak and two in Khare. In each
village one of the solar cookers was a commercial model provided by Exodus
Travel (http://www.exodus.co.uk/responsible-travel/our-projects/nepal-projects/solar-cooker-project)
identical to the ones we found throughout the Khumbu from Lukla to Everest Base
camp (the picture above shows one in the garden of the North Face Lodge in Lukla where we began and ended our trip.)
Exodus, which is a trekking company originally out of the UK,
manufactures their solar cookers in Kathmandu and installs them during the
off-season in as many of the lodges as they can. In their first phase
they installed “30 in the Everest Region and 1 in the Annapurna base camp”. The two we saw in the Hinku
valley are part of their effort to reach more remote areas. The other solar cooker in each
village was another type of locally built “home-made” model whose stainless
steel reflector strips were cut in Kathmandu and then carried in for
assembly. The Exodus model has a
larger and more robust parabola surrounded by fiberglass and has a unique
handle for easily rotating the cooker on two axes to face the sun. The
“home-made” model isn’t as easy to turn with the sun.
Second solar panel encountered on private residence outside of Lukla on trail to Khare. Appears to be 10 to 15 Watts, typical for running a kitchen light. |
Yaks grazing on the trail from Lukla to Khare; in general the Hinku Valley does not have large Yak populations |
The Tea Shop at Thukding, 3000 meters elevation |
At Thukding one begins to see evidence of deforestation in the hillsides surrounding the dwellings. There are no solar cookers on the Hinku Valley trail until one gets up to Thangnak and Khare and there are no solar hot water systems at all. This is in contrast to the Khumbu Valley trail where every tea house from Lukla up to Naamche has solar cookers and solar hot water systems and there are a considerable number of them all the way up to Everest Base camp thereafter. There are also no active backboiler stoves (stoves that have heat exchangers for heating water while cooking; there is only one that exists, in Khote, but the water heating system additions to it -- the pipes and hot water storage tank -- have not been installed yet.) We also noted the presence of only two improved cookstoves with solar/battery powered 9V fans to increase burn efficiency so as to produce less smoke and use less firewood (one in Khote and one in Khare). For this reason there is considerable pressure on wood supplies.
A look inside a dedicated wood shed. |
The denuded hillside at Thukding |
Another view of the woodshed with the denuded hillside in the background. |
Yet another view of the wood shed. |
The trail takes us through the area of deforestation |
As we continue our climb we see evidence of erosion exacerbated by deforestation |
Most of the bigger trees along the trail have been cut down for fuelwood. |
In these climates and altitudes trees grow rather slowly... |
Chhutanga Tea House 3245 meters |
In Chhutunga one of the dwellings below us had the typical 20 Watt solar panel |
The dining room we ate in had no photovoltaics. ONe can see one the wood pile sunder the blue tarp on the the left. |
The smoke wafting from spaces in the roof of the chimneyless dining hall gives an indication of the indoor air pollution problem. Inside it was hard to breathe. |
By the morning the entire valley was covered in snow, even though we were 700 meters below the official snow line. |
The snow continued as we climbed 3985 meters to Kharkateng, which is the official snow line. |
Many kitchens have more than one kerosene pump stove and most trekking expeditions bring their own. |
We started charging the batteries using a morningstar charge controller on the nearby rock, but when it started to rain and snow I moved them into my tent. |
The set-up was used to charge two 7 AH PbSO4 batteries wired in parallel going through a 300 watt inverter. |
The Solar CITIES tab torch proved itself a valuable companion... |
On a moonless night I could use the tab torch to find my tent in the darkness... |
The view from my tent in the morning... |
The tab torch put the test again... with the lights on... |
And with the lights out. |
This lodge had two batteries, one for each of their PV panels. |
The Tashi Dale Restaurant in Thaktor takes advantage of its sunny location to provide lighting and charging with its 30 Watt panel. |
The Doma Lodge is also equipped with a small solar panel... |
A wire from the main building supplies the electricity to the kitchen and dining area. |
Khote
The rest of the pictures in this post are of the village of Khote where we spent a couple of days. It is at the entrance to the National Park and is the first big staging ground for trekkers heading up to Mera Peak. As such it has many lodges which need to use a lot of wood and kerosene to provide heat and cooking fuel to trekkers staying there.
Khote has 5 lodges:
Mera Lodge, Lama Lodge, Namaste Lodge, Himalayan Lodge and Barunstse
Lodge. The village has
approximately 465 Watts of installed PV power.
Khote energy survey Tuesday May 8th 2012, 9:50
AM. Village has sufficient water
pressure for solar hot water but there is none installed.
1)
Namaste Lodge (beneath which we camped). Chimney and
Chulo; offers “battery charge
available” and “hot shower” (which is a 20 liter plastic bucket with a spigot
elevated in the stone and wood shower room). They have 3 PV panels, two 30 Watt panels and 1 15 Watt
panel. They also have a greenhouse
down by the river that gets very warm on sunny days, well over 40 C; too hot to
stay in for long. They also have
pit latrine by river; no concept of compost toilet operation.
2)
Lama Lodge: Back boiler. 1 30 Watt moncrystalline panel, pole
mounted, 1 20 Watt think film panel, horizontal on the main stove
building. Offers STD/ISD Local
call service and mobile charger point available. An additional 30 Watt Monocrystaline PV on room and
another 30 W panel on dining hall across the stream.
3)
Mera Lodge: Chula , 2 30 Watt PV, one on each side of the
building on a pole mount
4)
Noname: Chula
5)
Himalayan View:
Chimney, Chula, 1 15 Watt monocrystaline on office, 1 30 W PV monocrystalline
on left side of building top, 1 50 W PV panel mounted horizontal on the center
top of the roof. 1 30 W
monocrystalline panel on Mera Pins Conservation group bulding by the river
6)
Varunje: Chimney and Chulo; 1 20 W monocrystalline PV
7)
Kulung: Chimney and Chulo, offers camera and mobile battery
charging for 200 Rs per hour. Has
2 15 W monocrystalline PV panels
8)
Wholesale shop: Chulo
9)
Makalu Shop: Chimney and Chulo, has 1 15 W monocrystalline
panel
10)
Ramila Hotel and Lodge: Chulo; 1 15 W monocrystalline panel
11)
Mingma: Chulo; 1 15 W monocrystalline panel
Hotel Sumana has no PV
At Lama Lodge we meet
Yang Ji, Ang Babu Sherpa and Duma Sherpa who run the lodge. We also meet their brother, Kami
Sherpa, who runs the Climber’s World Lodge in Khare. He tells us “there are no trees up in Khare like there are
here so we only use wood for space heating. They cook with kerosene. He has a Solar Cooker though, so that helps!”
Lama lodge is the only lodge in the Hinku Valley with a
“backboiler” (“Pani Ta Taung ne Yantra”)
which has a heat exchanger pipe that enables it to heat a tank of water
while cooking. They paid 17,000 Rs
($ 212.50) for it with transport.
It would cost 10,000 Rs. In Kathmandu where it is manufactured ($125.00)
so the transport costs for this heavy steel item are not trivial but comprise
almost half the installed cost. It
is made in Jaulakel we are told, but there are many factories. They have not hooked it up yet; pipes
would cost an additional 3000 Rs ($37.50), with a 200 liter water tank costing
another 3000 Rs (a 100 liter tank would be about 2000 Rs or $25). They intend to hook it up when they
have more money however. Still,
according to tk from Practical Action
“backboilers aren’t always that effective in extreme highlands. What happens is that the cold water
going through the pipes in the heat exchanger at the top of the stove can keep
the air going into the chimney from heating up sufficiently for the afterburn
so they can have incomplete combustion. This can lead to a more smokey
burn.” Better engineering needs to
be explored to make these have the efficiency of an improved cookstove although
it might be argued that the savings in fuel from both cooking and heating water
offsets these inefficiencies. The addition of a fan, which the Lama Lodge back
boiler has, can help with this situation by creating the proper updraft which
the cold water pipes slow down.
In terms of Kerosene use we learn that each tank uses 5
liters of Kerosene, and is sufficient for cooking for 10-12 people. With a guest load of 40 people They need
about 15 liters a day (5 liters times 3).
With us they brought 6 20 liters kerosene jugs. They brought 4 from
Lukla and 2 were purchased from Khote.
So we had 120 liters weighing about 120 kg, requiring 4 porters at 30 kg
per porter. Lama Lodge tells us
that they consume about 20 loads of wood per season. They listed their priorities as:
1)
Improve firewood use
2)
More electricity for lighting and charging electronics
3)
Insulation.
They said they were familiar with the concept of biogas but
believed that without animals they couldn’t do it. The Hinku Valley doesn’t as
much of a Yak culture as the
Khumbu (though we photographed a Yak all the way up in Khare). There was no awareness
of food-scrap based biogas. They were also unfamiliar with the concept of
Greenhouse heating or compost heating, though there was a warm greenhouse
belonging to another lodge down by the river. Also, unlike Sherpa’s on the Khumbu trails, who grow
potatoes and use fertilizer they create with their own composting toilets,
there was no awareness of compost toilet technology and the toilets were pit
latrines always located down by the river.
Lama Lodge had 1 65 AH and 1 70 AH Trojan battery. They had
a 30 Watt Monocrystalline panel and 1 think film panel. They had a small charge
controller and a light string to the kitchen. They said wood
was their first fuel with Kerosene a second priority.
By 14:43 PM in mist and cloud we were at 0.66 Amps or 12
Watts, but when phone is added to load it bounces up to 0.73 and then to .86
and up to 1.01 Amp at 16:53, showing that loads can determine how much current
a PV panel puts out.
With our 200 Watt solar panel (3 X 68 W Energy Technologies
Inc. Tactical Solar Panel by Uni Solar)
charging in full sun our demand was 6.5 amps. When cloud covered the sun
the reading dropped to 4.5 amps.
In bright cloud we are still getting 5.56 amps. It seems we can get 50%
of the rated capacity of this thin film triple junction panel in cloudy
conditions. At 4:36 we are getting
1.16 amps which is about 25 watts, so a bit more than 10%.
Marcel’s 75 Watt foldable crystal panel puts out 4.4 amps in
bright sun and 1.2 amps in cloud; 25% of ourput. 0.9 amp in thick cloud so
about 18W or 20%.
May 7: We
demonstrate hydrogen production from Aluminum tab set up with urine using wood
ash as alakali.
Took me right back to 1975 when I trekked along these routes - not as many people back then as today...
ReplyDeleteYour Solar Cities work should be attracting greater Internet/media attention. I'll see what I can do.
Wow, this is a whole adventure going through just the photos. I didn't want it to end, though it is sad I want to be able to anything I can for them in Hinku
ReplyDelete-Sharone Tal
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