Published today: the progress report on the North Sea Wind Power Hub consortium": "Towards the first hub-and-spoke project"! northseawindpowerhub.eu/node/178
In short: 1. The North Sea is an offshore wind energy powerhouse 2. Countries must come together 3. Time for an ambitious next step 4. A solution is at hand 5. Cooperation is the way forward – The NSWPH consortium is helping to pave the way
Kudos to @EnerginetDK , @Gasunie , and @TenneT for showing leadership, developing a great, comprehensive approach to integrating ~180 GW of North Sea offshore wind into the European energy system, and bringing it to the next level!
As @GuidehouseESI team, we're proud to support the consortium in many ways, and we're looking forward to continue the co-operation, on one of the cutting edges of Europe's decarbonisation drive!
Hub-and-Spoke as the next step in the evolution of offshore wind connections:
Considerations on where to locate the Power-to-X (e.g. electrolyzers) when integrating North Sea offshore wind in the European energy system: Inland, Coastal, Offshore.
Possible configurations for North Sea energy hubs:
- All-electric
- All-hydrogen (as considered for the NortH2 project)
- Combined electric-hydrogen
In the combined electricity-hydrogen configuration, the electricity cables connecting the hub would have a capacity less than that of the wind farms. On very windy days, the offshore electrolyzer would kick in and bring part of the production onshore as hydrogen.
Next steps for the North Sea Wind Power Hub consortium, this year: full speed ahead!
Two options being considered for international hubs:
Distributed, consisting of a number of connected national hubs or
Centralised, located in the Exclusive Economic Zone of one of the countries, but connected to other countries as well.
What North Sea energy hubs could physically look like: a caisson island (up to 6 GW), a sand island (up to 36 GW), a platform on a 'jacket' (up to 2 GW), or a gravity-based structure (up to 6 GW). Dependent on many other considerations as well.
Next steps 2021, on technical feasibility:
Societal cost-benefit analysis: the tool for governments to make choices regarding North Sea energy hubs. Essential, and pretty complicated now it gets:
Hybrid (connections used for offshore wind farms, but also as interconnections between countries)
Cross-sector (producing electricity and hydrogen) and
International (which country gets what benefits, and how to share the cost).
Next steps, North Sea Wind Power Hub, cost-benefit analysis:
Important for the economics of North Sea energy hubs, and the connected offshore wind farms: regulation and market design.
Will it be a Home Market setup, or will there be an Offshore bidding zone around the hub, with its own wholesale prices?
Next steps, regarding market setup, governance models, and regulatory frameworks:
I trust this thread gave you a flavor of the many aspects of this important and challenging project, generating tonnes of valuable insights for the renewable energy industry and policy makers in Europe and beyond. Great to work on! Download the paper here: northseawindpowerhub.eu/sites/northsea…
The North Sea Wind Power Hub consortium's current work is being co-financed by the EU's Connecting Europe Facility, enabled by the project's PCI status (Project of Common Interest).
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Nasty climate tipping point in sight, especially for NW-Europe! "Nothing drastic will happen at the moment we cross it - which might be soon - but after that the collapse of the current will be unstoppable." And could lead to rapid regional cooling, not so far away from us.
This is a simplified map of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), bringing heat from the South Atlantic, via the Caribbean to the European side of the North Atlantic. On cooling there, the water sinks to 2-3 km depth and takes the cold to the South.
Without the AMOC, the North of Europe - especially Iceland, Scandinavia, and Britain - would be much colder than it now is.
Agreement between right-far-right Dutch coalition parties published now. Thread with some points on climate and energy. These are the plans, but execution will of course be key. Wilders and his PVV are in full climate denial, like much of the EU's far right.
1/
- Stick to existing agreements, no higher ambitions than EU policy
- No rules for improving energy efficiency of owner-occupied homes. Obligation (from 2026) to install heat pump on replacing gas-fired heating boiler canceled.
- End of EV subsidies in 2025.
2/
- Study how zero-emission zones in cities kan be delayed to create exceptions for entrepreneurs, but creating such zones remains decision of municipality.
- An end to subsidies for Bio-energy with CCS (for negative emissions) as soon as possible.
3/
Starting a week-long business & pleasure trip to Spain, by train!
Hope to be in Barcelona this evening :)
I'll keep you posted in this🧵
The plan for today: Utrecht - Rotterdam - Paris - Barcelona. The tricky part is changing trains in Paris. Theoretically 2 hours should be more than enough to get from Paris-Nord to Gare de Lyon (the rail planner irresponsibly proposed 1 hour), but @Eurostar is often delayed (2/n)
Made it to Rotterdam, at least ;)
Bit very early, but hey, why hurry on a Saturday morning? (3/n)
Reading the Dutch "Action agenda congestion low-voltage grids".
The accelating energy transition already brings grid issues here. In the low-voltage distribution grid, the growing number of solar panels (PV), electric cars (EV) and (hybrid) heat pumps ((h)WP) is the challenge.
Without measures, a large and growing number of households would experience periods with too high or too low voltage (over- resp. onderspanning) or risk of grid failure.
Measures are categorized in: 1) accelerating grid expansion 2) more efficient use of the grid capacity 3) saving energy as much as possible.
1) already gets a lot of attention, and each of the three main DSOs plans to spend around €1 billion/year. Many hurdles though.
"Transition doesn't make energy cheaper, but to the contrary, significantly more expensive"
Headline in Dutch @Volkskrant yesterday, 9 days before the elections here. "Consumers and companies will pay 92% more for electricity and natural gas by 2030".
Hmm, let's look into that.
Firstly, as others have already pointed out too, it's a comparison between 2020 and 2030. In 2020, energy was cheap: Covid reduced demand, and Russia hadn't started its energy war and attack on Ukraine yet.
Compared with 2023, not a lot would remain of the "+92%".
Looking into the forecasted price increase 2020-2030 it has three components: 1. Tax (Belasting) +€5 billion. That'd be a political choice, which has little to do with the energy transition. 2. Grid (Netbeheer) +€5 billion. Increase to be expected indeed.
But ...