EU GOES AFTER WIND
Powering Europe – New Report Sets Out Vision For The Future European Grid And Markets
24 November 2010 (Global Wind Energy Council)
"…[A] new report [from the European Wind Energy Association (EWEA) envisions] a modern renewable energy power system…[and] how the grid can integrate increasing amounts of wind energy…
"…[Powering Europe; wind energy and the electricity grid]…argues there are no major technical barriers – but there are major economic benefits - to integrating large amounts of fuel- and pollution-free wind energy into Europe’s electricity grid…"

"The new report identifies…two key barriers to hugely increasing the amount of wind power in Europe’s electricity supply…In order to deliver the onshore and offshore wind energy from where it is produced to where it will be consumed, Europe needs…[1] extended, upgraded and better connected grids…[and,2] fair and effective competition in a truly internal European market in electricity.
"The economic benefits of creating a single market in electricity and improve the infrastructure are substantial, according to the new EWEA report. The benefits of a better interconnected grid include a €1,500 million yearly reduction in total operational costs of power generation due to increased availability of all generation capacity…The benefit of integrating 265 Gigawatt (GW) of wind into Europe’s grids by 2020 – compared to no further growth in wind power capapcity - would be a saving of €41.7bn per year in the cost of electricity. This is a ‘merit order’ effect of €11 for every MWh produced, not just those MWh produced by wind turbines…a saving that could be passed on to consumers."

"The electricity grid infrastructure needed to accommodate increasingly large amounts of renewable energy and create effective competition in a single market in electricity includes a new [HVDC] offshore grid in Europe’s Northern Seas (North Sea, Irish Sea and Baltic Sea), as well as a number of improved interconnections across continental Europe (especially between Spain and France but also between Germany and its neighbours, across the Alps and in eastern and south eastern Europe)…
"…[F]lexibility will need to be a key feature of European power systems in the future…to take into account variable sources of power such as wind and solar. Smart grids will be needed to allow management of demand as well as improved management of supply, and largely national grids will have to be better interconnected…Denmark, Germany, Spain, Ireland and the Netherlands [already] their power systems much more flexibly than in the past…"
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