Doubling of Investments and System Flexibility by 2030

Industry News– December 5, 2023

“Please hold the line” – everyone knows what it is like to be stuck on hold. When added up over a lifetime, the time spent waiting for someone to pick up the line amounts to several weeks, according to a US study. But not only insurance customers, internet users or account holders are regularly put on hold. Operators of PV or wind power sites – or those waiting to become one – are experiencing their own version of a please-hold-the-line situation more frequently. The International Energy Agency (IEA) reports that worldwide at least 3,000 gigawatts (GW) of renewable energy projects, 1,500 GW of which are at advanced stages, are waiting to be connected to the grid. This is five times the capacity of PV and wind power installed in 2022, which demonstrates that power grids are increasingly turning into a bottleneck for the energy transition. The reason for this is that grid expansion and modernization cannot keep up with the quick deployment of renewable sources of energy as well as the electrification of the heating and traffic sector.

In the Netherlands, the power grids’ maximum capacity in certain regions is reached at any given time. This means there is long waiting times for companies and even small-scale consumers who wish to connect to the grid or expand their capacity. This is not only slowing down the construction of buildings and economic growth, but also endangering climate targets, grid operator TenneT warned in October.

More money for more flexible grids

To prepare the electricity grids for the energy transition and to meet individual national climate targets, global grid investments need to be doubled to more than $600 billion per year by 2030, the IEA demands. The focus is on digitalization and modernization, including intelligent meters, automated grid management, digital technologies for the measurement of consumption and improvement of the grid operation. Power systems need to become more flexible in order to handle the growing share of volatile renewable energies. According to estimations of the IEA, the need for system flexibility will also double between 2022 and 2030. This requires the deployment of all flexibility options available.

In the Netherlands, the government and grid operators now also plan to push ahead the implementation of grid-serving charging of e-vehicles and the use of intelligent controllable devices in order to get more out of the existing power grid. Furthermore, funding is planned for so-called energy hubs, in which companies coordinate their electricity demand and supply on site and therefore reduce the load on the grids.

The International Exhibition for Energy Management and Integrated Energy Solutions
Learn more
Further Content
Industry News
Revolutionary E-Car Charging Station Uses Wind and Solar Energy

October 20, 2023

Groundbreaking development in the field of sustainable e-mobility: The US company Change Wind Power has developed an e-car charging station that can simultaneously supply fresh energy through the intelligent use of wind and solar energy up to six electric vehicles

Webinar
The EU Market Outlook for Solar Power 2023-2027

February 6, 2024

In this webinar we will look at the prospects for PV in the 27 member states over the next few years, discuss the EU's expansion targets and take a look at the status of the EU manufacturing industry.

Industry News
"Transformation Atlas" shows the impact of electromobility on electricity grids

November 28, 2023

The increasing use of electromobility will significantly increase the demand for electricity in Germany in the coming years. Researchers at Fraunhofer IEE and the University of Kassel have investigated the challenges this will pose for the electricity grids as part of the "Decarbonising transport - energy system feedback" (DeV-KopSys-2) project.

Trend Paper
Drivers of the Portable Battery Storage Market

January 12, 2024

Portable battery storage systems are meeting increasing interest worldwide. This trend paper shows what drives this development.

Dipl.-Ing. Wolfram Cüppers, CEO of LADEFIX
A Second Life for Charging Stations: How Does Refurbishing Work?

The smarter E Podcast Episode 159 | Language: German

December 7, 2023

We speak with Dipl.-Ing. Wolfram Cüppers about refurbishing of charging stations

You are using an outdated browser

The website cannot be viewed in this browser. Please open the website in an up-to-date browser such as Edge, Chrome, Firefox, or Safari.