Which transmission architecture is the most beneficial to integrate large shares of renewable energy in the North Sea region? And what are the consequences of the planning horizon when planning such a system towards 2050?
PhD researcher Juan Gea-Bermudez from DTU Management elaborates these questions in the study Optimal generation and transmission development of the North Sea region: impact of grid architecture and planning horizon. Co-authored with Lise-Lotte Pade, Matti Juhani Koivisto and Hans V. Ravn.
We discuss the projects Promotion, Flex4RES and NSON.
Sound design by Dea Cisar.
Hosted and produced by Daniel Sneum, Sustainability Division, Technical University of Denmark
40 barriers to flexibility – and how to solve them
How to fully decarbonise the Nordics
Bonus: Sounds of energy
Crowdsourced scenicness and acceptance of wind power
The hidden sides of wind repowering
Importing waste: Good idea in a regional perspective?
Data centres - big deployment with a small splash
Are markets ready for biomethane?
Citizen finance: 176 billion Euros for renewables
Sector, vector and smart sector coupling
Teaser: Energy Policycast is back!
TENTRANS: Large-scale renewables = large-scale local benefits?
AURES I & II: Increasingly popular RE auctions
Flex4RES: Water flushes batteries away
Policies for flexibility: A Flex4RES perspective
PPAs: Good for the energy system – and for old ladies
Teaser: A research-based podcast on energy policy
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