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Renewable energies except solar electric or thermal (seeforums dedicated below): wind turbines, energy from the sea, hydraulic and hydroelectricity, biomass, biogas, deep geothermal energy ...
Wind Howler
I learn econologic
I learn econologic
posts: 16
Registration: 06/03/08, 16:45




by Wind Howler » 07/03/08, 17:15

I return to the charge, with this beautiful administrative-literary piece
(quote from HESPUL):

before installing a hydrogenerator:

1- Calculate the potential of the site
To do this, measure or estimate the height of fall and the water flow.

2- [u] Check that you have the authorization to exploit the water
[/at]
For new installations, an authorization to exploit the hydraulic resource must be requested from the service responsible for the water police. In practice, this authorization request is long and tedious and has little chance of success. This is why it is preferable to have an unlimited authorization, called water rights, especially if the project is small (pico-hydraulic).

Subject to maintaining the consistency of the structure (water intake, water outlet, derived flow, etc.) in relation to the period which defines it, the water right is acquired when it is possible to provide or prove:

* a deed of sale of national property with mention of the right to use water in perpetuity.
* the justification for the existence of the water intake before the abolition of feudal rights (August 4, 1789): The imposed reserved flow is then 1 / 40th of the nominal flow.
(a useful tool: the Cassini map)
* the existence of an authorization to operate before October 19, 1919: If the power of the installation is less than 150 kW, the authorization is perpetual

If you do not have an existing water right or if you want to change the consistency of the structure benefiting from a water right (flow increase especially in the case of mills), you must submit an application file authorization to operate from the water police department (DDE for state-owned watercourses or DDAF for non-state watercourses):

* Check that the river is not classified with the DDAF
* If you want to take between 2 and 5% of the flow of the river, make a simple declaration of water intake to the Prefecture (in 3 copies and with impact notice)
* For a larger sample, make an authorization request (in 7 copies and with impact notice). The processing of the request may take several years.

3- Submit a building permit at your town hall, if the building containing the machines is to be renovated or constructed

4- Contact suppliers and / or design offices to have your project sizing and costing

5- Contact potential funders to find out about their aid policies and the award procedure

6- Make the grid connection request with EDF Access to the distribution network (or the management)

7- Carry out the administrative procedures necessary to set up the purchase obligation contract

* request for a certificate giving right to the obligation to the DRIRE
* request for a purchase contract from EDF (or the management)

8- Once the work is completed, send the paid invoice to your funders to obtain payment of the subsidies

9- Are you an individual and the project is located in your main residence? Notify your expenses in your income tax return for the corresponding year in order to benefit from the tax credit

Your project is not in the Rhône department? Contact your Info-> Energy Space to find out what to do with you. His contact details are available on the ADEME website or at Ademe (GIF)

Published March 29, 2006.

and now you still want it your micro-turbine?

(during this time, how many megawatts are lost in the twists and turns of the administration? - not to mention the thousands of people to build the machines, install them, maintain them, repair them - there is no shortage of rivers in France: I even saw on a hike in inland Brittany 5 mills, each of which used to collect the water that came from the other Five wheels that turned with the same water for less than 2 kilometers, obviously without carbon dioxide emissions. ..)
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Wind Howler
I learn econologic
I learn econologic
posts: 16
Registration: 06/03/08, 16:45




by Wind Howler » 07/03/08, 20:38

to possibly be of service: a very precise, detailed, well-explained and illustrated account of the installation and operation of a photovoltaic central production unit, all of whose electricity is sold to the EdF. Nothing is missing, including tax aspect, costs and profitability. Concretely, it is a tiny individual business, which must be managed as such. Profitability is limited, but the "client" is secure and the contract "concrete". The turnover is obviously a function of the surface of solar panels exposed, therefore of the amount of the investment. There are even people who rent roof space to use solar panels:

http://www.macoda.com/index.php/maison: ... ovoltaique
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