http://www.technologyreview.com/BizTech/wtr_16595,296,p1.html

Wednesday, March 15, 2006
A Supergrid for Europe

A radical proposal for a high-tech power grid could make possible the
continent's vast expansion of renewable energy sources.

By Peter Fairley

Europe has big plans for greatly expanding its renewable energy sources, but
there's a problem: weak connections between a patchwork of national power
grids. The situation is particularly problematic for wind power, because
smaller, isolated grids have more difficulty absorbing the variable power
generated by wind farms.

Last month a Dublin-based wind-farm developer, Airtricity, and Swiss
engineering giant ABB began promoting a bold solution to the continent's
power grid bottlenecks: a European subsea supergrid running from Spain to
the Baltic Sea, in which high-voltage DC power lines link national grids and
deliver power from offshore wind farms. When the wind is blowing over a wind
farm on the supergrid, the neighboring cables would carry its power where
most needed. When the farms are still, the cables will serve a second role:
opening up Europe's power markets to efficient energy trading.

The result would be a more integrated and thus more competitive European
market, delivering power at lower prices. And it would enable Europe's grid
to safely accommodate even more clean, but highly variable wind power. That
accommodation will be needed because the European Union has set a target of
21 percent of electricity from renewable sources by 2010, and much of this
will come from wind farms. "The primary benefit of the supergrid is that it
aggregates wind power across geographically dispersed areas, and, by doing
so, it smoothes the output of those wind farms," says Chris Veal, the
Airtricity director promoting the supergrid. "If the wind isn't blowing in
the Irish seas, it's likely to be blowing in the North Sea or the Baltic.
The wind is always blowing somewhere."

By solving two problems at once -- interlinking grids and providing hookups
for more offshore wind farms -- Veal thinks Airtricity has found a solution
that's economically feasible. "It's something the market can do," he says.

Airtricity proposes to start by building a massive 20 billion euro ($23.8
billion) project in the North Sea. Last November, Swiss-based ABB completed
a study mapping out the power links for a group of wind farms that
Airtricity would like to build in the southern half of the North Sea.
(Airtricity is vague on the exact location, since it is still staking claim
to the seabed, which lies in the U.K., German, and Dutch waters.) The wind
farms would produce 10,000 megawatts of electricity -- 50 times more than
today's biggest offshore farms.

A 5,000 megawatt DC power line would carry power west to the U.K., and a
second 5,000 megawatt line would run east to continental Europe, perhaps to
the Netherlands. When the wind is too calm to produce power -- about 60
percent of the time at Airtricity's North Sea sites -- the lines would go
into interconnect mode, carrying 5,000 megawatts of electricity in either
direction. This would, for example, more than double the U.K.'s
energy-trading capacity, making that country's grid more stable and giving
its consumers access to a wider range of power producers.

This flexible DC network would be made possible by digitally controlled,
high-voltage DC power converters, a technology that has been entering the
market over the past five years. The key, says ABB project manager Lars
Stendius, is the newer technology's ability to reverse a line's current
without changing the "polarity" of its voltage.

Veal says the ambitious project would take five years to build and
construction could start as soon as 2010. At the moment, Airtricity is
looking for partners to help finance it, including transmission players who
could profit from the proposed energy trading.

Hydropower could play a key role, too. Gregor Czisch, an energy systems
modeling expert at the University of Kassel in Germany, says the benefits of
a European supergrid linking Mediterranean and North Sea wind farms with
Norway's immense hydropower reservoirs would be "considerable." Those
reservoirs could be tapped during periods of low wind, providing a renewable
backup to the wind power.

But, to Czisch, solidifying the European grid is just a first step. His
optimization studies show that the benefits of the supergrid multiply if one
extends high-voltage DC lines beyond Europe to North Africa and the Middle
East. By doing so, he says, one could ensure that there was always enough
output from renewable sources, such as wind plants and solar panels, to
power an area spanning 50 countries and 1.1 billion people.

In Czisch's visionary scenarios, wind power alone provides 70 percent of the
region's total power, thanks largely to excellent wind resources in Egypt
and Morocco that flow more powerfully and more consistently than Europe's.
And it's affordable: including the power lines, Czisch estimates that under
his scheme electricity consumed in Europe (including the African wind power)
would cost about 4.6 eurocents per kilowatt-hour -- about the same as the
European average. "It's no more expensive than our existing power supply,
with no fossil fuels and no nuclear," he says.

The challenge is to get the supergrid onto the policy agenda. Because it's a
big-energy concept, Czisch says, it runs counter to the thinking of many
renewable energy advocates, who he believes prefer to see renewable energy
as local energy sources, such as solar panels on rooftops. "You would have
to build huge high-voltage DC lines, huge wind-power plants in Morocco, and
so on. This is something that could easily be done by the big utilities --
but the utilities are the enemy of the renewables people," he says.

Airtricity's Veal is hoping to get some help from the European Commission,
which just released a proposal for an integrated European energy policy.
"We're not going to solve all of the EC's problems," Veal says, "but we can
be a major contributor."

Peter Fairley is a TR contributing writer based in Paris.


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