Europe's Unforeseen Renewables Problem
Europe's
Unforeseen Renewables Problem
BY TYLER DURDEN TUESDAY, FEB 02, 2021 - 5:00 Authored by Irina Slav
via OilPrice.com,
Earlier
this month, something happened in Europe.
It didn’t get as much media attention as the EU’s massive
funding plans for its energy transition, but it was arguably as important, if
not more.
A fault
occurred at a substation in Croatia and caused an overload in parts of the
grid, which spread beyond the country’s borders. This created a domino effect
that caused a blackout and prompted electricity supply reductions as far as
France and Italy. The problem was dealt with, but
it’s only a matter of time before more problems like this occur—the reason: the
rise of renewables in the energy mix.
Bloomberg reported on
the incident citing several sources from Europe’s utility sector. While no one
would directly blame the blackout and the increased risk of more blackouts on
renewables, it is evident that Europe’s change in the energy mix is raising
this risk.
The problem
has to do with grid frequency. Normally, it is 50 hertz,
Bloomberg’s Jesper Starn, Brian Parkin, and Irina Vilcu explain. If the
frequency deviates from this level, connected equipment gets damaged, and power
outages follow. The frequency is normally maintained by the inertia created by
the spinning turbines of fossil fuel—or nuclear, or hydro—power plants. With
Europe cutting its coal and nuclear capacity, this inertia declines as well,
exposing the grid to frequency deviations.
“The
problem isn’t posed by growing green electricity directly but by shrinking
conventional capacity,” the chief electricity system
modeler at Cologne University’s EWI Institute of Energy Economics told
Bloomberg.
This is pretty much the same as saying it is not the pandemic that
is wreaking havoc on the global economy, but the lack of enough healthy people
to keep it going. Wind and solar power, for all their benefits, such as a much
lower emissions footprint, do have drawbacks, as does every source of energy.
In this case, the drawback is the intermittency of generation. This
intermittency cannot maintain the inertia necessary to keep the grid at 50
hertz.
Utilities
know about the problem.
“It is not a question about if a blackout in some European
regions will happen, it is only a question of when it will happen,” said Stefan
Zach, head of communication at Austrian utility EVN, told Bloomberg. “A
blackout might happen even in countries with high standards in electricity grid
security.”
But the problem is not being publicized enough to spur those in
charge of decision-making into action. The Bloomberg report mentions things
like energy storage and batteries, yet batteries—where they are now—cannot
replace the inertia-creating turbines of coal-fired power plants, which keep
the grid buzzing at 50 hertz. They would help in a brief
outage, but they can’t keep millions of households and industrial
facilities running. Take the world’s biggest battery to date, currently in
construction in Australia: with its capacity of 300 MW/450 MWh, the battery can
power half a million households. For an hour.
Problems
such as what happened at the Croatian substation highlight one fact that few of
those riding on the renewables bandwagon would like to talk about: that solar
and wind capacity is maybe being added a little too quickly, while fossil fuel
capacity is being retired a little too quickly.
Take Germany: it is fast reducing its nuclear and coal
generating capacity. And yet, the country, which is the poster boy for
renewable energy in the EU, is currently generating more energy from coal than from
wind, simply because the wind does not blow permanently. It is also generating
zero energy from solar at the moment because it’s winter, which does not make
for the optimal conditions for solar farms.
Or take California and its rolling
blackouts last summer when heat waves hit the state that gets a
third of its electricity from renewable sources. At the time, officials refused
to acknowledge this fact as a potential cause of the blackouts, but with or
without acknowledgment, the fact remained: electricity output from solar farms
declines as the sun goes down just when there is a surge in demand from
households. At the same time, as it retires its natural gas plants, the state
did not have enough backup generation capacity to make up for the lost supply.
Or here’s another example: back in 2018, the UK went for nine
days with zero power generations from wind farms. Why? Because of something
called a wind draught.
At the time, this event led to a spike in next-day electricity prices, and
forecasts for calm weather for two weeks did not help. The UK government now
wants to power the whole country with wind power, which in light of past events
might be a little bit risky.
Renewable energy is a great thing. Once they’re manufactured,
solar panels and wind turbines do not emit greenhouse gases for the duration of
their production life. Solar specifically has become a cheap way to become
relatively independent in terms of electricity supply if you happen to live in
a sunny part of the world.
Yet solar
and wind have been touted as a silver bullet solution to the emissions problem
the planet is having, and they are not a silver bullet. There is no silver
bullet solution. The sooner decision-makers realize this, the sooner they can
start working on ways to reconcile renewables with grid reliability. Otherwise,
we might see an unwelcome repeat of what many Soviet bloc countries experienced
in the 1980s—timed blackouts lasting months and even years.
https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/europes-unforeseen-renewables-problem
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