A TRANSCONTINENTAL RENEWABLE NETWORK?

HOW HIGH VOLTAGE DIRECT CURRENT TRANSMISSION COULD TRANSFORM POWER SUPPLY

The SuperSmart Grid (SSG) is a theoretical concept that involves the creation of a transcontinental electricity network connecting Europe, the Middle East and North Africa to deliver low cost, high capacity, low loss electricity. To support global efforts to decarbonise power generation, could the SSG become a reality?


The SSG is a fusion of a super grid, a wide-area, often transcontinental transmission network and a smart grid, which uses digital technology, such as smart meters, to react to fluctuations in energy demand.

By implementing this system across Europe, the Middle East and Africa, this geographical area could benefit from an entirely renewable energy supply, which in turn supports the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal Seven: ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all.

Offshore wind farms and solar power are the two resources that offer great potential, given the large number of suitable sites for both systems throughout the region. Having identified potential energy resources, how can this energy be transmitted to meet demand over such a vast area?

DEVIATING FROM THE AC NORM

High voltage direct current (HVDC) uses direct current (DC) for most electrical power transmission. Although DC is less common than standard alternating current (AC) systems, it meets the demands of the SSG for a variety of reasons.

HVDC transmission is a proven method of achieving power transmission over very long distances. It would play a vital part of the SSG, since it allows power to be transmitted from areas where it is in abundance to areas experiencing a shortage, which would secure the energy supply across the entire region. It would also facilitate the use of offshore wind farms — whose natural location is so distant from areas of electricity demand that HVDC is essential to ensuring efficient transmission.

HVDC also allows power transmission between unsynchronised AC distribution systems. AC systems operate at a set frequency and if these frequencies are different, the systems cannot be connected. HVDC circuits do not have a frequency, eliminating this problem and allowing multiple circuits to be interconnected.

Most significantly, HVDC suffers lower electrical losses than AC transmission. It has a uniform current density throughout the line, so there is no skin effect as there is in AC circuits. Although the corona effect, which is an electrical discharge that appears around a charged conductor, is still generated in a HVDC system, it is considerably lower than in AC systems, facilitating more efficient electricity transmission across the vast area encompassed by the SuperSmart Grid.

CONVERTING BACK TO AC

HVDC is ideal for transmitting over long distances, but when transmitting electricity into the local AC transmission grid, the direct current must be switched back to alternating current using a converter system. All converters, including HVDC converters, generate harmonic distortion to some degree.

If harmonics are not controlled, they can wreak havoc with the transmission system, jeopardising power quality and increasing the chances of equipment malfunction and electrical losses on the line. Therefore, it is important to integrate harmonic filters into the HVDC converter stations to block these unwanted currents.

Harmonic filters allow current at the frequency of the AC network to pass through, while redirecting distorted harmonic currents into a harmonic filter resistor, where they are dissipated as heat. This ensures that the unwanted currents are safely removed from the transmission network in a controlled way, which helps to secure the power supply when converting from DC to AC.

Although the SuperSmart Grid is purely theoretical, it’s clear that the technology necessary to realise this concept already exists. With countries all over the region setting ambitious renewable energy targets, perhaps this could be the solution to providing a secure, sustainable power source across all three continents.

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ADVANCING OFFSHORE WIND

HOW CAN WE EXPAND OFFSHORE WIND TO REACH 2030’S 40 GW TARGET?

The UK’s history is enriched with maritime activity. Surrounded by water from John o’ Groats to Lands’ End, the surrounding waters have played a pivotal role in trade, travel, and most recently, electricity production. Achieving the Government’s target of generating 40 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind power every year by 2030 will require continued investment and development in power equipment.


Offshore wind power plays to the nation’s geographical strengths while also providing a clean energy source to fuel the country’s path to net zero. The North Sea’s high quality wind resources and relatively shallow water make it an ideal location for offshore wind farms. According to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA), around 90 per cent of global offshore wind capacity is located in the North Sea, which is why the UK is already a world leader in this renewable power source.

However, to reach the Government’s 2030 production goal, energy suppliers must make advancements in wind turbine technology, while simultaneously considering how their generated power will be safely transferred to the grid.

IMPROVED TURBINE TECHNOLOGY

Turbines capable of producing more power per rotation are essential for the development of efficient offshore wind farms. One way of improving turbine efficiency is to increase the blade length.

An increased blade length means that stronger forces will act on the turbine, so the blade material needs to be appropriately chosen. To achieve an adequate stiffness-to-weight ratio to avoid deflection, carbon fibre or fibreglass blades are typically favoured. However, there is an expanding market for hybrid reinforcements, which combine the two materials together for optimum sturdiness.

Improvements in wind turbine technologies have already triggered a move into deeper waters to use sites with better wind resources. Static wind turbines are still restricted to waters at a maximum depth of 60 metres, so to upscale the UK’s wind power output, floating wind turbines will be essential.

MORE SUITABLE SITES

Once all viable sites within 60 metres of shore have been constructed, floating wind projects will become vital to offshore’s growth. Floating offshore wind farms, which can be located up to 80 kilometres (km) from land, could play a key role in the long-term decarbonisation of the power sector.


Floating wind turbines sit on a steel and concrete floating system instead of a fixed base, meaning they can be placed in a larger number of sites up to 200 metres deep. They can also be towed, allowing them to be relocated without much additional cost. This broadens the potential output that offshore wind could provide and brings it one step closer to the 40 GW target.

SECURED POWER SUPPLY

Like all renewable energy, offshore wind can be unpredictable and inconsistent, which can make grid connection challenging. In periods of high wind, large inrush currents occur, which can lead to overvoltages on the grid and subsequent equipment malfunctioning.

It’s important to prepare for these inevitable inrush currents by integrating technologies such as pre-insertion resistors (PIRs). Already in use across many of the UK’s windfarms, Cressall’s PIRs have a high thermal mass, which allows them to absorb excess energy produced by the inrush current and safely dissipate it as heat. This prevents damage to the grid and improves the reliability of offshore wind’s power supply.

Offshore wind holds great potential in the shift towards renewable energy and could be the key to decarbonising electricity generation. However, we must continue to advance critical power protection technologies to prevent any obstacles in its upscaling and to enable this powerful resource to flourish.

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