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A Comprehensive Review on Available/Existing Renewable Energy Systems in Malaysia and Comparison of Their Capability of Electricity Generation in Malaysia

Afrouzi, Hadi Nabipour; Wimalaratna, Yuhani Pamodha; Ahmed, Jubaer; Mehranzamir, Kamyar; Liew, San Chuin; Wooi, Chin-Leong; Siddiquea, Bazlul Mobin

Authors

Hadi Nabipour Afrouzi

Yuhani Pamodha Wimalaratna

Kamyar Mehranzamir

San Chuin Liew

Chin-Leong Wooi

Bazlul Mobin Siddiquea



Contributors

Lin-Shu Wang
Editor

Wenping Cao
Editor

Shu-Bo Hu
Editor

Abstract

Malaysia is one of the fastest emerging and developing countries in the world. To drive the economical workhorse, large amounts of power is required. The power demand has risen to 156,003 GWh per year in the year 2016, almost 30,000 GWh more than 5 years prior. Fossil fuels such as natural gas, coal, oil, and diesel have been the driving force powering Malaysia’s grids. However, these resources will not last forever, and they do harm to our environment. To counter this, renewable energy (RE) projects have been constructed all around Malaysia. This paper discusses on available and existing renewable energy systems (single/hybrid) in Malaysia and provides a comparison of their electricity generation capabilities. The renewable energy sources that are covered in this paper include Solar, Hydropower, Biomass, Tidal and Geothermal. At the moment, hydropower is the largest renewable energy producer, contributing to almost 15% of the country’s total energy generation. A lot of resources have been channeled towards the initiative of hydropower and it has definitely borne much fruit. This is followed by Solar Energy. Even though it is not as successful as hydropower, there is still a lot of avenues for it to grow in a tropical country like this. Malaysia is still relatively new in terms of power generation using biomass sources. There has been a gradual increase in the power generation using biofuels through the years and its future does look bright. Energy generation from wind, tidal, and geothermal sources has been rather challenging. Because of Malaysia’s geographical location, it experiences slow winds on average throughout the year. This has led to insufficient output for its financial input. Besides that, Malaysia also has relatively low tide, if compared to other Asian countries such as Indonesia and the Philippines. This contributed to the failure of tidal energy in Malaysia, but there have been signs of locations that can be suitable for this energy generation. Besides that, the country’s first geothermal power plant project failed due to a lack of preparation and discipline during the project’s execution. There is a high initial cost for geothermal projects, and the chances of failure are high if the necessary precautions are not followed. This could be one of the reasons why this branch of renewable energy has not been explored deeply.

Citation

Afrouzi, H. N., Wimalaratna, Y. P., Ahmed, J., Mehranzamir, K., Liew, S. C., Wooi, C., & Siddiquea, B. M. (2021). A Comprehensive Review on Available/Existing Renewable Energy Systems in Malaysia and Comparison of Their Capability of Electricity Generation in Malaysia. In L. Wang, W. Cao, & S. Hu (Eds.), Entropy and Exergy in Renewable Energy. InTech. https://doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.96586

Online Publication Date Mar 16, 2021
Publication Date 2021
Deposit Date Dec 28, 2021
Publicly Available Date Jun 27, 2023
Publisher InTech
Book Title Entropy and Exergy in Renewable Energy
DOI https://doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.96586
Keywords Malaysia, renewable energy, solar energy, hydropower, biomass, geothermal
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2823509
Publisher URL https://www.intechopen.com/online-first/75754

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