Green energy ratchets up power during coronavirus
pandemic
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[July 22, 2020] By
Susanna Twidale
LONDON (Reuters) - Renewable power has
taken up a record share of global electricity production since the onset
of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a Reuters review of data,
suggesting a transition away from polluting fossil fuels could be
accelerated in the coming years.
Advocates of traditional energy have long argued that clean energy
sources, like solar and wind farms, which depend on fickle weather,
cannot be trusted to provide steady supplies of electricity into
national grids that were designed to operate in tandem with reliable
coal and gas generators.
But the past three months have shown that renewable energy has become
more dependable, sector experts say, accounting for well over half of
output in some European countries, while grid operators proved they
could successfully manage larger doses of fluctuating energy flows.
"This has been a real test of how resilient the grids are, and we know
they coped because the lights stayed on," said Rory McCarthy, energy
storage senior analyst at global consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie.
"Maybe this will give confidence to governments and policy makers who
were apprehensive, that they can be more ambitious about the number of
renewables on the grid."
However, before governments take decisions based on recent experiences,
they will have to answer various questions, says Michelle Manook, chief
executive of the World Coal Association, a lobby group for the industry.
These include how the system would have coped in the mid of winter, when
sunshine is at a premium, or how it will manage when the economy picks
up and demand gathers pace.
"What seems little known or understood is that a carbon-free electricity
generation system based wholly on renewables … is not currently
attainable," Manook told Reuters.
The recent boost for wind and solar power came for all the wrong
reasons: the health crisis has tipped the world into recession, pushing
down electricity usage by more than a fifth in some countries, according
to the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA).
Most grid operators automatically turned to the cheapest energy supplies
to meet the falling demand. Wind and solar power costs very little to
generate once the installations are built and is often backed by
government mandates and subsidies. As a result, more expensive fossil
fuel sources were the first to be pulled.
EUROPEAN RECORDS
Data from Finnish energy technology group Wartsila, collated from
Europe’s electricity grid operators, shows renewables generated an
average of 44% of power across the 27-nation bloc and Britain from April
to June, when many countries were in lockdown, against 37.2% in the same
period last year. Daily peaks hit 53%.
The leading performer was Austria which saw renewables average 93% from
a previous 91%, thanks largely to hydropower, the data showed. Portugal
saw its share of renewable energy surge to 67% from 49%, while in
Europe’s biggest economy Germany it averaged 54% up from 47.5%.
(GRAPHIC - EU renewable electricity generation as a % of the total
April-June 2020:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/qmyvmkmzqvr/Pasted%20image%201595331862258.png)
"We are seeing figures we weren’t expecting to see for another 10
years," said Matti Rautkivi, Wartsila’s director of strategy and
business development.
The increase in the share of renewables is essential if the European
Union wants to achieve its climate and energy goals and cut harmful
greenhouse gas emissions blamed for climate change.
The EU's target is to meet 32% of its energy needs, including transport,
from renewable sources by 2030, but will review these goals later this
year.
“It is encouraging that the penetration of renewables has increased,” EU
Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson told Reuters.
“We are currently assessing the impact of the more ambitious 2030
climate objectives and different scenarios of getting there, including
the role of renewables,” she said.
Britain’s National Grid <NG.L> has set itself a target of being able to
operate a completely carbon-free electricity system by 2025, which it
says would be the world’s first. The coronavirus lockdown provided an
early test, with renewables hitting a peak share of 67.5% of electricity
in May. The country also went without coal power for 67 days from April
10 to June 16 – the longest such stretch since 1882.
While clean power is increasingly available, storing it and ensuring a
smooth supply remains highly complicated. Winds die down, clouds cover
the sun, or, alternatively, gales can blow on bright, sunny days.
The grid managed fluctuations by relying, in part, on a tool called
“demand side response” (DSR), said Julian Leslie, head of networks at
National Grid Electricity System Operator (ESO).
[to top of second column] |
Workers clean photovoltaic panels inside a solar power plant in
Gujarat, India, in this July 2, 2015 file photo. REUTERS/Amit
Dave/Files/File Photo
DSR asks users to time their consumption to match power generation – something
that can ease pressure on the grid and reduce costs for consumers.
Dan Tonkin, who runs operations at the Cornish Ice Company, a firm that supplies
ice for the fishing industry in southwest Britain, has been one of the
beneficiaries of this system. He says he received emails from network managers
as part of a trial telling him the best times to utilize his energy-intensive
machinery - when supplies were ample and prices cheap.
“For example, they’ll say that the following day they want me to run at 100%,
which means I can operate virtually free,” he said.
STORING SUNLIGHT
A similar system is in place in India, where officials in 2017 started asking
farmers in some regions to water fields in the daytime to make use of higher
solar and wind output, a power ministry official in New Delhi said.
They had previously been expected to irrigate late at night or in the evening to
preserve power supplies during the day for other industries.
As elsewhere in the world, the share of renewable energy in India’s electricity
market climbed during the COVID-19 lockdown, hitting a record high of 30.9% in
the week of June 15 from 17.9% in mid-March, the IEA said.
While Britain’s DSR system of matching power generation with consumption
provides some relief to grids, it is not a panacea.
The country's National Grid has regularly had to fall back on so-called
“curtailments”, paying power producers to shut down when electricity supply is
too high and risks disturbing operations.
The firm said it expected to pay out 826 million pounds ($1 billion) in various
costs from May to August, more than double than in the same period last year. It
did not give a breakdown, but said curtailments made up a "significant
proportion" of this.
Jorge Pikunic, managing director of business solutions at British utility
Centrica Plc <CNA.L>, said those costs were a problem. "The solution to
balancing the system of the future does not lie in curtailing," he said.
"Instead, we should … encourage the use of flexible technologies such as DSR and
storage."
The United States is a world leader when it comes to storage, notably battery
technology, and some businesses are investing heavily in the sector.
Renewables, including hydro, wind and solar, provided 23% of U.S. electricity
during the April lockdown, up from 17% in the same period of 2019, latest U.S.
Energy Information Administration (EIA) data shows. The peak share rose to
almost 80% in parts of the windy interior of the country.
(GRAPHIC - US electric power summary April 2020 for utility scale facilities %
change compared with April 2019:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/dgkvldmnkvb/Pasted%20image%201595332153240.png)
President Donald Trump’s administration has warned that too large an increase in
the use of renewables on the grid will reduce its resilience against
weather-related disruptions. It says coal plants serve a crucial role in
reliability because they can store large amounts of fuel on site.
Looking to at least partially address this problem, California, which has the
most installed solar capacity of any U.S. state, hopes to more than quadruple
its battery capacity by year end, to just over 900 megawatts.
Anne Gonzales, a spokeswoman for the California Independent System Operator,
which maintains the state’s grid, says battery facilities are normally placed
next to solar plants and can be used to extend output from the sites beyond
sundown.
Keen to encourage the development of battery technology, the British government
said on July 14 it was cutting red tape and relaxing planning rules to make it
easier to launch large-scale energy storage projects.
Ben Backwell, CEO of the Global Wind Energy Council, a Brussels-based trade
association, said governments will have to introduce an array of such
initiatives if they want to build on recent experiences and further boost
renewable energy.
"Depending on how quickly demand revives we would expect incumbent fossil fuels
to come back into the market and for the share of renewables to return to levels
closer to those before COVID, unless there are policy changes," he said.
(Reporting by Susanna Twidale, additional reporting by Sudarshan Varadhan in
Chennai, Nichola Groom in Los Angeles, Kate Abnett in Brussels, Agnieszka
Barteczko in Warsaw and Jane Chung in Seoul. Editing by Richard Valdmanis and
Crispian Balmer.)
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