Title: The Future of SAPP, WAPP,
1The Future of SAPP, WAPP, CAPP, and EAPP With
Inga
IEEE GM 2005 San Francisco June 15, 2005 PURDUE
UNIVERSITY F. T. Sparrow Brian H. Bowen Zuwei Yu
2Establishment of Africas Power Pools
3Sub-Sahara Regional MW Totals
4Southern African Power Pool
SAPP well along in their Operation (1995)
SAPP Major new lines for increased trading
5West African Power Pool
WAPP Major new lines for increased trading
WAPP moving into Operational phase (2000)
6Central African Power Pool
EAPP now in the process of identifying needed HV
lines (2005)
DRC-Inga with future exports to SAPP, WAPP,
EAPP, Egypt
7 East African Power Pool
EAPP Just getting organized expecting a launch
late 2005
8Proposed Future Africa Grid
- International transmission
- links within power pools
- International transmission
- links between pools
- During next 10 years
- development of lines
- CAPP to SAPP WAPP
- CAPP to Egypt EAPP
- CAPP becomes central link
- with vital role for Inga site
9North American Trading Between Interconnects
- System designed for reliability, not economy
trades - Result very little load carrying capability
- between regions
Pacific DC HV Inter-Tie 3,100MW, 800miles
10Total Gross Transactions Between 4 NERC Regions
Trade represents 8.8 of total U.S. peak demand
11The Feasibility of Grand Inga
- The underlying question is there enough
- demand in Africa to justify the enormous
- up-front dam construction cost?
- The average historic demand growth has
- averaged about 2 per year over the last
- ten years
- Is there enough suppressed demand to
- justify the much higher growth rates
- projected by member nations?
12Forecast Growth in Electricity Demand
1993-2002 Average Historical Growth
for- Egypt 2.6 Nigeria 2.4 S.
Africa 1.4 Forecasting 5 What are low
and high scenarios?
13Assumptions for Inga Feasibility Analysis
- All demand growth in likely export markets for
- Inga (SAPP, WAPP, EAPP, Egypt) will be met by
- Inga power, not local construction
- Growth rates in the range of 2 to 4 per year
- Electricity will be sold at 3.5 cents/kWh
(otherwise - markets will generate their own electricity)
- Inga construction and transmission line costs are
- 16 Billion
- The cost of capital is 10
14Demand Values Export Revenues
58,556MW Egypt capacity 18,000MW 76,556MW
total
Assume base year demand with 80 capacity factor
(76,556 x 0.8 x 8,760) MWh Year 1 revenues
resulting from increase in demand growth of 2,
electricity price of 30/MWh (76,556 x 0.8 x
8,760 x 0.02 x 30.0) 322M
15Inga Question Answer
Q When will the annual net revenues from export
sales cover the annual capitalized cost of the
Inga project? A1 Never if the growth rate is
2 A2 In 19 years if the growth rate is
4 Does this mean Inga should be abandoned? NO
Just broken down into smaller pieces
16Inga Annual Net Revenue Stream
17Growth in Demand Cost of Capital
With economies of scale in construction and a
given growth rate in demand, the higher the
cost of capital, then the smaller will become the
optimal size of each installation Alan
Manne Stanford University
18Low High Demand Growth Rates
Demand Capacity
Demand Capacity
Time
Time
High Growth Low Interest Rates
Low Growth High Interest Rates