Posted on 10/23/2014 5:26:23 AM PDT by thackney
A new HVDC line will let Europe store more wind energy in Norways hydropower system
Norways hydropower reservoirs make up nearly half of Europes energy storage capacity. European grid operators need energy storage to cope with an ever-mounting, always-shifting torrent of wind power. See the connection? So does Norway. In December, engineers will energize a new subsea power cable that will begin to bridge the gap between need and opportunity, greatly expanding European power systems access to Norways hydropower-rich power grid.
The 240-kilometer cable across the Skagerrak Strait separating southern Norway and northern Denmark is Norways first new power link to Denmark since 1993. Called Skagerrak 4, its high-voltage direct current (HVDC) convertersthe electronic units at either end of the line that transform AC into high-voltage DC and vice versaare also the building blocks for more ambitious cables from Norway to wind-power heavyweights Germany and the United Kingdom. Construction on those is expected to commence during the coming year.
The existing Skagerrak interconnection, three HVDC cables with a combined 1,000 megawatts of capacity, is already showing the world just how well wind and hydropower complement each other. According to the Danish Energy Agency, such interconnectors are why Denmark can accommodate the worlds highest levels of wind power, which met 41.2 percent of Danish demand in the first half of this year. At times wind power production even exceeds the countrys domestic power demand.
We store their surplus in the hydro reservoirs and then feed it back on a seasonal basis or a daily basis. This is a very strong business case, says Håkon Borgen, executive vice president at Statnett, Norways state grid operator.
Norwegian hydropower turbines throttle down as Norway consumes Danish wind energy instead, leaving an equivalent amount of energy parked behind dams. And when the weather shifts and becalms the North Sea winds, the reservoirs and Skagerraks cables feed that stored energy back to Denmark.
orgen says the addition of the 700-MW Skagerrak 4 advances plans to plug the U.K. and Germany into Norways batteries by pushing the most flexible form of HVDC technologyvoltage source converters (VSCs)to its highest voltage yet. VSCs ability to stabilize the voltage of the AC grids on both sides of a cable makes the technology better suited than any existing alternative for handling intermittent flows of renewable energy, he says. Skagerrak 4s VSCs operate at 500 kilovolts each30 percent higher than the previous record holder. Borgen says that voltage boost will be needed to reduce losses on longer runs such as the 720-km cables to the U.K., which will be the worlds longest subsea power cables.
ABB, of Zurich, which built Skagerrak 4s VSCs, says the tougher technology challenge was ensuring that the VSCs function well alongside the older HVDC lines. Thats because current that Skagerrak 4 carries south across the strait must cycle back to Norway via the Skagerrak 3 cable, which uses the older, classic HVDC converters. This will be the worlds first paired operation of cables using VSCs and classic HVDC converters.
Such a pairing gets interesting when operators want to reverse the flow of powersomething that can happen up to 1,000 times per year at Skagerrak as winds and markets shift. VSCs normally reverse power flow by reversing a lines current, whereas classic HVDC converters must flip the lines voltage polarity.
So how to reverse power flow on both lines? ABBs solution is a 5- to 10-second process that uses coordinated actions by both converter types and eight high-speed switches that reconfigure the wiring of the VSCs, flipping their polarity so that the flow of power in Skagerrak 4 can change direction while its current keeps flowing south.
The process interrupts the circuit by which current flows from one cable to the other. But Lars-Erik Juhlin, an HVDC expert at ABB, says there is no meaningful loss or surge in power to the AC grids.
The key, explains Juhlin, is the excellent electrical conductivity of seawater. When the power-reversal scheme interrupts the circuit, the converters use subsea electrodes at either shore to feed the return currents across the strait through the water. Sending current through seawater can corrode subsea infrastructure such as natural gas pipelines, but here, the dose makes the poison. They can accept even 2,000 amps for up to 2 hours. So for a short pulse, its no problem, says Juhlin.
Statnetts follow-on interconnection projects could move quickly because they will just be longer versions of Skagerrak 4. The first, a pair of 500-kV VSC cables between Norway and Germany, cleared final regulatory approvals last week. Statnett and its European grid partner, Dutch-German firm Tennet, foresee charging up the 1,400-MW NordLink in 2018. The pair of NorwayU.K. cables, a joint effort of Statnett and London-based National Grid, is slated to start by 2020.
There should be many more cables to come if European countries make good on official goals to eliminate carbon emissions from power generation by 2050. The German governments Advisory Council on the Environment, for example, concluded in its influential 2011 report that an optimal zero-carbon power system for Germany would need more than 40 gigawatts of interconnection to Norway. That system, the council projected, would deliver power at a very affordable 6 to 7 euro cents per kilowatt-hour. Without Norwegian storage, power costs would rise to 9 to 12 euro cents per kilowatt-hour.
Ånund Killingtveit, a professor of hydraulic and environmental engineering at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, says Norwegian hydropower is up to at least part of the task. Killingtveit led a five-year, US $5.7 million research program on hydropower balancing, which showed that existing hydropower reservoirs could fairly easily move about 25 GW of energy in and out of storage without damaging the environmentfive times as much as they currently manage. The key, he says, is installing pumps to shift water from one reservoir to a higher one nearby, thus actively storing power rather than just deferring production.
If there is a limit to Norways energy storage potential, it may ultimately be the countrys own grid. Statnett has begun a 10-year, $8 billion to $10 billion grid upgrade, but it factors in only 3.5 GW of additional power from the three cable projects. The question may be how many power lines the Norwegians will accept to smooth Europes departure from fossil fuel power.
Seasonal? Norway must have some huge reservoirs that don't freeze.
The ice is only a foot or so thick. What Norway must have are reservoirs where surplus power is used to pump water uphill into a storage facility where it later can be released for power generation.
It adds to the problems/costs, but doesn’t make it impossible.
In Norway, hydropower accounts for nearly 99% of the total electricity production. To meet winter demand, storage schemes are implemented in tandem with run-of-river schemes to a large extent in cold region hydropower systems. In these systems, ice creates operational constraints during winter that can lead to reductions in power production. The problems occur in the various phases of the ice regime, mainly due to frazil ice, ice runs, and ice jams. Counteracting these ice problems is usually a difficult task that involves expensive measures and possibly lost production.
Read More:
http://ascelibrary.org/doi/abs/10.1061/(ASCE)CR.1943-5495.0000059
Pump for months and months and then wait for a couple of months before months of surplus release?
Yeah, the water can sit there and wait for winter when power demand is higher. It’s usually a reservoir up in a valley above another reservoir.
Looking on the bright side, it will provide jobs for and possibly even drown many of the Muslim immigrants who are bedeviling the place.
HVDC transmission lines jetted into the sea floor are not new. This line would be a parallel connection with three more already in the same location.
Very interesting. The biggest problem with wind and solar is lack of storage. I would like to see what the efficiency is (1 kWh in equals whar fraction of a kWh out with transmission loss both ways, pumping loss and even evaporation loss) and what the estimated cost of storing and retransmitting each kWh is.
Based upon other reports, I would guess it to be 60~70% efficient.
We use some pumped storage in the US to supply daytime peaks with nightime generation.
With all that cheap energy they could just heat them...:-) Would have further benefits as well. "Hey Olaf, it's finally winter - let's go for a swim in the reservoir."
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