Even a few years ago, renewable energy played only a small role in most
countries’ energy planning. While governments and publics were eager to
increase the share of renewables in their energy systems, the economics
of doing so were challenging. There were also serious concerns about
the impact on the electricity grid of adding too much capacity from
variable renewable energy sources, such as solar and wind.
This has all changed. Prices for inputs — particularly for solar
photovoltaic panels and wind turbines — have come down so far that
renewable power is now cost-competitive with conventional generation in
some regions. As of 2014, 144 countries had established national plans
to expand renewable energy, and almost hundred had set specific targets
and incentives.
And as a new report from the World Bank’s Energy Sector Management Assistance Program (ESMAP) makes clear,
with the right combination of new policies and investments, countries
can integrate unprecedented shares of variable renewable energy into
their grids without compromising adequacy, reliability or affordability.
“Renewables are no longer a marginal business,” said Anita Marangoly George,
senior director of the World Bank’s Energy and Extractives Global
Practice. “We are talking about levels of energy that can bring light
to thousands of households, grow businesses, meet the needs of cities,
and drive entire economies.”
Making the transition to large-scale renewable energy supply requires
substantial shifts in thinking and infrastructure: grid modernization,
adoption of new technologies, reworked business models for utilities,
and updated policy and regulatory frameworks. The new ESMAP report, Bringing Variable Renewable Energy Up to Scale: Options for Grid Integration Using Natural Gas and Storage, looks at a number of new approaches to facilitate these shifts and ensure the success of this transition.
Credit: The Danish Wind Industry Association (via Flickr)
These approaches include strengthening interconnections between
areas, diversifying the contribution of different renewable energy
sources from various locations, and building up complementary generation
and demand response technologies. The report builds upon previous
reports on the topic published by the World Bank and other international
organizations, by focusing on the important role that natural gas and
energy storage can play in integrating variable renewable energy
sources.
With their fast start-up times, natural gas-fired power generation
technologies have an edge over other conventional generation options
such as nuclear or coal in that they can ramp up and down quickly,
providing power as needed to balance variations in wind and solar
inputs.
Likewise, energy storage options have the potential to address most
of the challenging aspects of integration. Comprising a wide range of
technologies — including pumped hydro, compressed air, multiple battery
technologies, and thermal storage — energy storage can act as a source
of demand (through charging) at times of low energy use throughout the
day, and a source of supply (through discharging) when demand increases.
As the report makes clear, this new comprehensive approach also
brings new challenges. For example, using natural gas for complementary
power generation can have an impact on national budgets and gas
procurement strategies, and running gas generators on a part-time basis
can also increase maintenance costs.
Utilities and regulators will also have to rethink their business
models to accommodate an increasing number of clients that are both
consumers and distributed generators. Additional compensation mechanisms or incentives may need to be
created for flexibility and reserve capacity, so that system operators
can procure the necessary supply to ensure reliable delivery of
electricity.
These and other policy proposals mark just how far forward the debate has come, according to Anita Marangoly George. “Five years ago, we would not have even been talking about these
issues,” she said. “We are no longer talking about getting to five
percent renewable energy penetration; we are talking about the
challenges of balancing when you go above 20 percent. We are no longer
talking about intermittency; we are talking about managing variability
across the entire system.”
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2015/03/the-renewable-electricity-grid-the-future-is-now
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