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Electricity in Goa
Hi All
I would like to find out from anyone who has owned a property in Goa or rented long-term what they did to overcome the electricity problem there! With power cuts almost daily, often several times per day, what did you do to solve this problem and keep your appliances going? As I have mentioned, my family and I are going to be moving to Goa full time in September and renting first (probably for a year+) while we find land and have our own villa constructed. In the villa we are planning to have solar pannels installed to provide constant power. Does anyone have experience of these and know of any good suppliers? However renting we will obviously have the same problem and can't just go about installing solar panels in someone else's property! So wondering if anyone had any alternative methods they use to keep the power flowing as such! Any help most gratefully appreciated! Thank you Julia x |
Re: Electricity in Goa
No replies so far! Does everyone here just 'put up' with the inconsistent electricity supply in Goa? Or do you try and overcome the problem?
Any advice and creative solutions welcome :) J x |
Re: Electricity in Goa
Originally Posted by GoanPlaces
(Post 7562465)
Hi All
I would like to find out from anyone who has owned a property in Goa or rented long-term what they did to overcome the electricity problem there! With power cuts almost daily, often several times per day, what did you do to solve this problem and keep your appliances going? As I have mentioned, my family and I are going to be moving to Goa full time in September and renting first (probably for a year+) while we find land and have our own villa constructed. In the villa we are planning to have solar pannels installed to provide constant power. Does anyone have experience of these and know of any good suppliers? However renting we will obviously have the same problem and can't just go about installing solar panels in someone else's property! So wondering if anyone had any alternative methods they use to keep the power flowing as such! Any help most gratefully appreciated! Thank you Julia x Some discussion on this subject took place at this thread I like your idea of solar panels and am contempating installing them at some stage to augment alternate sources such as inverters . do keep in mind that while goa gets lots of sun and though solar panels are available in india (and subsidised too afaik), the amount of energy produced using this method is rather limited - so you would have to have alternate means of backup like inverters (this was discussed on the other thread). as we are on this subject you may find this film very interesting click here to watch - though not entirely about solar electricity, this 2 hour film for me was an eye opener about many issues that we face in the world today and it does touch upon alternate energy (hope this link is not considered too much of a digression) |
Re: Electricity in Goa
Originally Posted by GoanPlaces
(Post 7565642)
No replies so far! Does everyone here just 'put up' with the inconsistent electricity supply in Goa? Or do you try and overcome the problem?
Any advice and creative solutions welcome :) J x |
Re: Electricity in Goa
Originally Posted by GoanPlaces
(Post 7565642)
No replies so far! Does everyone here just 'put up' with the inconsistent electricity supply in Goa? Or do you try and overcome the problem?
Any advice and creative solutions welcome :) J x :fingerscrossed: monsoon I leave the answers to J5 and Babu |
Re: Electricity in Goa
candles for seeing with and the gas ring for my cuppas, lappy also has a decent battery.
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Re: Electricity in Goa
Originally Posted by GoanPlaces
(Post 7562465)
Hi All
I would like to find out from anyone who has owned a property in Goa or rented long-term what they did to overcome the electricity problem there! With power cuts almost daily, often several times per day, what did you do to solve this problem and keep your appliances going? As I have mentioned, my family and I are going to be moving to Goa full time in September and renting first (probably for a year+) while we find land and have our own villa constructed. In the villa we are planning to have solar pannels installed to provide constant power. Does anyone have experience of these and know of any good suppliers? However renting we will obviously have the same problem and can't just go about installing solar panels in someone else's property! So wondering if anyone had any alternative methods they use to keep the power flowing as such! Any help most gratefully appreciated! Thank you Julia x |
Re: Electricity in Goa
Originally Posted by GoanPlaces
(Post 7562465)
Hi All
I would like to find out from anyone who has owned a property in Goa or rented long-term what they did to overcome the electricity problem there! With power cuts almost daily, often several times per day, what did you do to solve this problem and keep your appliances going? As I have mentioned, my family and I are going to be moving to Goa full time in September and renting first (probably for a year+) while we find land and have our own villa constructed. In the villa we are planning to have solar pannels installed to provide constant power. Does anyone have experience of these and know of any good suppliers? However renting we will obviously have the same problem and can't just go about installing solar panels in someone else's property! So wondering if anyone had any alternative methods they use to keep the power flowing as such! Any help most gratefully appreciated! Thank you Julia x On our Acron site solar panels are installed for water heating only, they really work a treat. Another luxury we have is a piped gas supply, a real blessing. Most people use an inverter for the power failures. Tata supply solar water heating systems in Goa. |
Re: Electricity in Goa
There are several suppliers in Goa for solar powered water heating panels.
Racold, and Tata are only two of them. We used Racold (Mapusa) who were very efficient on the order and supply side. 2 panels giving 250 litres daily of scolding hot water cost 40,000 R/- as of late 2005. An application for the 4,000R/- government grant was made to the government. This was supposed to have been refunded soon after installation. No money has been forthcoming and we are not chasing it up at the moment. Cost of installation, all plumber's labour and materials, is at your own expense. Finding a good plumber who doesn't run off to Kerela with the substantial deposit for two months because he is having "marital problems" ("new married wife not yet having baby, must try harder") can be difficult. We looked around at the time to find solar alternatives for all electrics, but found nothing in Goa. Hopefully, things might have moved on by now. Let us know if you find anything. Power cuts are fairly regular at the moment and quite prolonged (Calangute/Candolim). The monsoon has yet to arrive, and there is hardly any extra load demand from tourists. Since the rain is not yet bringing down trees on the power lines, I am not certain why there should be so many "outages". |
Re: Electricity in Goa
I heard rumours when I was last in Goa that they are gradually putting in new power lines and putting them underground. If true it may cut down on power cuts but I wouldn't hold my breath. :blink::blink:
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Re: Electricity in Goa
As this thread is getting a little muddled, clarification might be a good idea?
Solar Water heating; Very basic low-tech. Involves running water over a black surface placed in sunlight to absorb the heat from the sun and then stored in a separate tank. Also requires plumbing for hot water which a lot of Goan properties do not have. Very simple to make, in fact the proprietory brands are exhorbitantly expensive for what they involve. Pretty sure they made a system on Blue Peter last month with a Fairy Liquid bottle and some egg cartons. As far as grants are concerned, the are only available to those with "residency" so a straight-forward FN is ineligible. Solar Electric generation; Still pretty high tech. As has already been mentioned, even a large quantity of panels will still have a pretty low output. Compared with the cost of electricity in Goa they simply do not make sense. Pretty sure that any worth using will be imported therefore expensive beyond sensible. Even where they are freely available in other parts of the world they are considered to be more of a "green" statement. Monsoon; Both these systems are of limited use during the monsoon period as they require plenty of bright sunlight. Although the monsoon has breaks and the sun comes out, it can still be wet, grey and full cloud-cover for days on end. As this is when the electricity supply is at its most intermittent, not such a good idea as back-up. The money will be better spent on inverters and banks of batteries if you just can't manage without power for a few hours. |
Re: Electricity in Goa
Thank you for all your replies! When I said solar panels I meant the ones for electricity generation. Although solar water heating is also a good idea. We have searched the internet and found some manufacturers in Delhi and Bangalore which we will check out. I know they don't provide much power, but hey in these long power cuts then anything is better than nothing! We will probably have a combination of mains and solar power in our house. I like the idea of an inverter. Not being an electrician myself I don't know much about these, but my husband is great wit this stuff! Will definitely look to get one of those too!
Thanks for all the alternative methods also! I will definitely be packing a few JML Light bulbs in December! Julia x |
Re: Electricity in Goa
When you get to Goa you will find solar panels on sale - they are always on show at the "exhibitions" at Campal and Bosco School in Panjim.
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Re: Electricity in Goa
J5 has told me to tell you to disregard what I have just told you - they are not electric :thumbdown:
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Re: Electricity in Goa
Originally Posted by emsirrah
(Post 7574017)
J5 has told me to tell you to disregard what I have just told you - they are not electric :thumbdown:
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