Wind power Spain - News and Information
Electricity generation from wind depends on weather conditions which can fluctuate a great deal more than with other renewable resources of energy such as hydraulic. "Since the electricity generated cannot be stockpiled, it is instantly transmitted on the network," explains Jean Verseille, the author of the industry forecast study from the French transmission system operator, RTE.
Therefore, as the share of electricity generated from wind power in Europe increases, so do potential variations in supply, Verseille points out. In addition, variations can be worsened when national wind parks are concentrated in certain areas as is the case in northern Germany. Bordering countries dealing with high supply variations coming from the German network can be particularly affected as Germany is highly interconnected with the rest of Europe. This is less the case of Spain because it is connected to Europe through France, which then acts as a sort of buffer zone.
Issues:
Recent forecasts from the Union for the Coordination of Transmission of Electricity (UCTE) in Europe point to new challenges for the security of electricity supply over the next decade (2005-2015).
While UCTE predicts western and central Europe will not be at risk in 2005-2007, it warns the "full potential cannot be always tapped due to transmission system bottlenecks". UCTE therefore calls for increased investment in generation and transmission grids, saying 30 extra Giga Watts are needed to secure transmission operations by 2015.
UCTE further points to the increasing challenge renewable energies pose to secure electricity transmission, especially in Spain and Germany which have high shares of wind power.
However, the lack of co-ordination between European electricity transmission utilities, combined with their monopolistic situation in most countries, act as a break to the further development of wind and other renewables. |