WWEA Report Wind Energy 2050
WWEA Report Wind Energy 2050
WWEA Report Wind Energy 2050
Organizing original
photographs:
Main Author:
Dr. Jami Hossain
Stephen Selvadas (Windforce) and Gnanaprakash (Windforce)
____________________________________________________________
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Back Cover: Management
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Preface
The WWEA technical committee report Wind Energy 2050: On the shape of near 100% RE grid (hereafter referred to as WWEA Grid Integration Report) is a futuristic assessment not only of the wind power
capacities that can come up by the year 2050 but also about arriving at an understanding of the evolution
of the electricity grid in conjunction with evolving wind technologies and other ancillaries and systems and
also with the evolution in grid management strategies to deliver uninterrupted power to consumers in a near
100% RE Grid.
The report has 5 main parts 1) Introductory part that presents the background information and highlights
the factors that will continue to provide a thrust to wind technology and deployments 2) An overview of the
emerging face of grid and grid integration issues 3) Trends in deployment and technology 4) Assessment of
wind penetration levels by 2050 and 5) Evolution of the grid management and the grid model
Wind turbine technology has continued to evolve making an ever deepening impact on the world wide energy system, particularly the grid. While currently 2-5 MW individual wind turbines are being used in Onshore regions and 5-8 MW in offshore regions, this may change in next ten years as many new concepts and
initiatives are under research and development. Yet another kind is the small wind turbine of a few kilowatts
or less, that too is catching up. The predominant model is a horizontal axis 3 bladed wind turbine. However,
this too may change with many technological concepts being experimented.
A lot of analysis presented in this report is done by WWEA technical committee, however, there are also expert inputs from outside the association. Sources of information and data include WWEA but also open data
available from The Worldbank , IEA etc.
This report presents a viewpoint of WWEA on the future of Grid, 100% RE and likely scenario by 2050.
WWEAs firm belief that wind energy will emerge as one of the major and mainstream sources of energy in
a few decades is now supported by concrete data, trends and developments that we have tried to capture in
this report. It is important to mention that the report has inputs from a number of wind energy associations
across the world and represents these varied viewpoints and perceptions as well. The report should be useful
to agencies, utilities, governments, analysts, market players, industry and professionals and academicians.
Jami Hossain
Technical Chair, WWEA
October 2015
WWEA 2015
ii
Jean-Daniel Pitteloud
PR Manager, WWEA, Bonn
Nico Peterschmidt
Managing Director, Inensus, Germany
Dechang Shen
Chinese Wind Energy Equipment Association,
China
Dexin He
President WWEA, China
Stefan Gsnger
Secretary General WWEA, Bonn
Gadi Hareli
Israel Wind Energy Association
iii
Nomenclature
iv
AFDB
DC
Direct Current
DFIG
ERCOT
EU
European Union
FACTS
FiT
Feed in Tariff
GHG
GIZ
GW
Gigawatt
HVDC
HVRT
ICE
IEA
IGBT
IPCC
KfW
Kreditanstalt fr Wiederaufbau
KV
Kilo Volt
kWh/yr
LOLE
LVRT
MERC
MW
Megawatt
NASA
NIWE
NREL
PGCIL
PV
Photo Voltaic
RE
Renewable Energy
RES
RMSE
SCADA
SCIG
TPP
TW
TerraWatt
TWh
Terawatt-hour
VSC
WEC
WRIG
WWEA
WWF
Table of Contents
Preface
iii
Nomenclature
iv
Table of Contents
vi
vi
viii
Executive Summary
xi
1.0 Introduction
1.1
1.2
Technology
1.3
Grid Integration
11
2.1
13
2.2
14
2.3
Wind Forecasting
15
2.4
16
2.4.1 Transmission
17
17
17
2.7
Transport Sector
19
2.8
Smart Grid
19
2.9
Island Grids
20
21
21
21
22
23
3.1
23
3.2
China
25
3.3
United States
28
3.4
India
30
3.5
Africa
32
3.6
Analysis
33
4.0
35
4.1
Different Scenarios
37
4.2
41
45
49
49
52
6.1
6.2
7.0
Concluding Remarks
References
57
60
vii
xi
Figure 1.3: Annual cumulative installation of wind farms (1990 2013) (GW)
Figure 1.7: Trends in Hub height and Rotor diameter (m) for predominant turbines
16
23
24
24
25
26
Figure 3.6: Wind generation v/s consumption of wind generated electricity (% of total)
27
Figure 3.7: Trends in electricity generation from renewable energy as Percent of total
viii
electricity generation
28
28
29
29
30
31
Figure 3.13: Annual growth rates of cumulative wind farm capacity (India)
31
32
33
34
35
38
38
39
40
40
41
43
43
48
50
51
55
34
36
42
49
50
54
ix
Executive Summary
Global warming and increasing electricity consumption trends in many parts of the world pose a
serious challenge to most countries from a climate
change and energy security perspective. Harnessing of wind energy, which is indigenously available
in almost every country can be a major mitigating exercise to address both the issues. WWEA in
its earlier WWEA Wind Resource Report (2014)
(http://www.wwindea.org/wwea-publishes-worldwind-resource-assessment-report/) has assessed the
worldwide potential to be of the order of 95 TW,
which is more than adequate to meet the electricity requirements of the world in combination with
other renewable energy options.
Energiewende or energy transition will result in a
high level of penetration of renewable energy in the
power systems around the world. Some countries
like Denmark and regions like Texas, already have
up to 50% or even more penetration of renewable
energy. On some days, Denmark receives 100% of
its electricity requirements from wind energy. High
penetration of renewable energy, in particular wind
energy, due to the fluctuating nature of the source,
presents many challenges in integrating the wind
power generation with the conventional power system or the electricity grid.
In recent times there has also been much interest
in 100% renewable energy, which requires a complex grid interface with a varied number of generation devices and balancing ancillaries such as bat-
xi
120.00
Asia
100.00
EU
80.00
US & Can
60.00
Latin America
40.00
Africa
20.00
0.00
2010
xii
2011
2012
2013
14.0
12.0
10.0
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
Low = 40000
Likely = 57000
High = 74000
Likely = 30%
High = 40%
Concluding Remarks
The world energy system, which is predominantly
hydrocarbon based must now undergo a transition
to make way for a renewable energy based system
in which wind energy plays the predominant mainstream role. The planetary environmental concerns,
energy access and energy security issues, the geopolitics of oil and resulting conflicts in many parts
of the world, all these aspects point towards the urgent need for this transition or Energiewende as it
is called.
WWEA in its earlier WWEA Wind Resource Report (2014) has assessed the worldwide potential
to be of the order of 95 TW, which is more than
xiii
xiv
v
v
v
v
1.0 Introduction
Modern industrial civilization, built over the last
300 odd years has made huge transition from a predominantly agrarian society to an industrial one.
The journey to machine age has been most miraculous and makes for an amazing story. Energy has
been a key element of this story. Beginning with the
first coal based steam engine developed in the 17th
Century; energy has been at the centre stage of this
evolution. Mankind was fortunate to stumble upon
huge reserves of hydro-carbons across the world that
has fueled modern civilization in an unprecedented
way. One could say that our civilization is built on
tinue to intervene in natural systems in an unnatural way consistently, the outcomes are going to be
disastrous.
It is now an established scientific fact that anthropogenic activities are at the root of global warming
and even if GHG emissions were neutralized completely, the inertia of the climatic system will result
in average global temperatures rising well into the
next century. In its latest report, IPCC1 commenting on future risks emanating from Climate Change
has said:
Continued emission of greenhouse gases
will cause further warming and long-lasting
changes in all components of the climate system,
increasing the likelihood of severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts for people and ecosystems.
Limiting climate change would require substantial and sustained reductions in greenhouse gas
emissions which, together with adaptation, can
limit climate change risks.
Climate change is undoubtedly a major driver of
wind power development. In 2004 burning of fossil fuels in Industry and in general for electricity
Kuwait
Sweden
UAE
France
High income
Estonia
Denmark
Libya
United Kingdom
Serbia
Croatia
Lithuania
Turkey
Lebanon
Thailand
Azerbaijan
Tajikistan
LA & Carribean
Moldova
Paraguay
Jamaica
El Salvador
South Asia
Nicaragua
Ghana
Nigeria
Senegal
Congo
Eritrea
TW
(http://www.wwindea.org/wwea-publishesworld-wind-resource-assessment-report/).
Such
assessed capacity is more than enough to build a
worldwide 100% RE scenario in a foreseeable future. Wind power penetration in the conventional
power system is still quite small at 4% (Source:
WWEA). It is imperative that significant additional
contribution to the grid from this renewable energy
resource, would pose serious technological and even
policy and regulatory challenges. Many of these
challenges, have been worked upon across the world
in various institutions, research establishments and
among the grid operators.
In this report, first and foremost, we present an overview of the grid integration issues to highlight the
fact that most of these issues are technology and grid
management related, have been partially resolved and
are indeed surmountable. We then look at trends in
electricity generation across the world to arrive at low,
medium and high renewable energy scenarios by the
year 2050. The report is prepared with the objective
of supporting all other worldwide initiatives towards
100% RE so that indeed we can step off from the
300
250
196.9
200
150
100
59
50
0
1.3
1.7
4.8
1985
1990
1995
18
2000
2005
2010
2013
Figure 1.3: Annual cumulative installation of wind farms (1990 2013) (GW)
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
Source: (WWEA)
1.2 Technology
The drivers mentioned above have also lead to the
evolution of wind turbine technology, matured to
a point where it can operate as a reliable machine
in a near unattended situation and interface with
a complex electricity grid to feed grid quality electricity.
Source: http://ultimateskirmish.co/tag/wind-farm-wallpapers
Source: http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_energy/our-energy-choices/renewable-energy/how-wind-energy-works.html#.VcLy-POqqko
Rating (kW)
2000
1500
1000
500
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014
Figure 1.7: Trends in Hub height and Rotor diameter (m) for predominant turbines
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
Rotor
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014
Hub Ht (m)
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
drops off steeply such as most coastal regions of India or Western US, offshore wind farms are a difficult proposition. However, currently trials are on
in a few projects with floating type of wind turbines
that may minimize the foundation costs and also resolve other logistic issues around off-shore projects.
Northern Europe with nearly 6 GW capacity has
maximum offshore projects in the world. China has
installed 500 MW capacity in the intertidal zone.
Offshore wind farms, though not necessarily the
most favored option today, in times to come could
unfold as yet another huge opportunity.
same time technological developments in the industry indicate that new designs of wind turbines with
higher hub-heights and large rotors, enable harnessing of wind energy even in areas that were earlier
not considered suitable for setting up wind farms.
At the same time new technological and management approaches such as forecasting of wind energy
output from windfarms, efficient use of storage capacities in the power system, remote controls over
wind turbine operation as well as the transmission
linkages to other regions and systems, in the foreseeable future, can quiet significantly enhance the
ability of the conventional power system to accept
more wind energy.
In many parts of the world, we are currently managing the power system with wind penetration of the
order of 40% - 50% (Denmark, Texas, Tamilnadu
etc.). According to WWF in its report The energy
report 100% renewable energy by 2050 (http://
wwf.panda.org/what_we_do/footprint/climate_
carbon_energy/energy_solutions22/renewable_energy/sustainable_energy_report/), we could get all
the energy we need from renewable sources. The
first recommendation of this report is
Promote only the most efficient products. Develop existing and new renewable energy sources
to provide enough clean energy for all by 2050
Therefore, efficiency goes hand in hand with 100%
RE concept and coupled with other measures such
as smart grid and other renewable energy systems,
we have a case for a near 100% renewable energy
powered grid. Given that we have only 4% wind
penetration today (source:WWEA) and combined
with 16% of hydro (Source: worldbank 2011) we
have nearly 20% RE penetration today. The energy
transition is likely to happen over a time horizon
10
11
12
13
14
going to the grid through the IGBT converter. Variable speed wind turbines are more desirable from a
grid integration perspective as they have greater ability to cope with short-term wind fluctuations. Such
variable speed wind turbines with IGBT converters
also have the capability to manage reactive power.
These control systems can supply electricity leading,
lagging or at unity power factor. Many features that
are possible with advanced power electronics and
controls have not been fully exploited for grid integration. Low Voltage Ride Through (LVRT), High
Voltage Ride Through (HVRT) or curtailed power
output or switching down of some wind turbines
to limit power injection at bus-bar are some of the
possibilities. In case of grid disturbance or a problem with one of the generators or sudden increase
in load demand, one can experience voltage and
frequency variations and normally wind turbines
shut down if these variations go beyond 10% of the
nominal value. A large wind capacity going out of
the system can create major disruption in the grid
with cascading effect and many of the conventional
power plants can start after tripping. This can cause
a complete grid failure. Such situations can be tackled if wind turbines are equipped with LVRT or
HVRT features. This way the wind capacity does
not get disconnected from the grid and in fact helps
the grid tide over the disturbance.
Variable speed wind turbines can also interface well
with storage systems. We can think of wind turbines
with some built-in storage and depending upon
spot prices of electricity, grid frequency tracking
or the time of the day, excess wind generation can
go to a battery bank or the battery controls could
be programmed to enhance the generation in case
of certain shortfall in wind. Many of these features
though not necessarily available on all wind turbines
today, are technical solutions that can help bring
about greater integration of wind energy.
Forecasting of wind speeds is generally undertaken
at a macro level or at windfarm level. However, appropriately designed forecasting system can also
15
21.9%
15.6%
11.7%
3.9%
Coal
Hyd
NG
16
Nuc
Oil
2.0%
Wind
17
18
19
20
The issue of increasing the peneration of Renewable Energy Sources (RES) in the local grid of an
island becomes a very different problem in comparison to the penetration in large territories such
as a country within a continent. To make a case
analysis it is necessary to keep in mind the impact
of the electricity generation using Renewable Energy Sources (RES) such as wind and PV in these
local electric systems. The impact depends on several factors, most important being the technology
used. For example, if the solution is based on wind
energy, the type of wind turbine and the strength
of the electric system are important. Fixed speed
wind turbines or variable speed wind turbines have
different kinds of impacts. Moreover, these impacts will be different if the electric grid is strong
or weak. For the calculation of the limit of wind
generation, it is important to know these operating conditions of the system.
The per cent contribution to the grid of wind generation with respect to the total generation will
be limited. This limit is due fundamentally to the
climatological dependence of wind energy and because generation varies through the day. This aspect
defines a maximum per cent of penetration and integration with the grid keeping in view grid stability and its frequency.
To solve the penetration of RES in these kind of
electric grids, typical in islands, many solutions
have been proposed by several experts which have
to take into account the increase in the penetration.
21
To maximize automation: To introduce automation in different aspects and parts of grid until
distribution. Load Dispatch Centers and the grid
should be ready for automation as the number of
locations at which wind systems connect with grid
will be increase with time.
22
To mitigate fluctuations of the grid using inverters: To use inverters in order to mitigate fluctuations in voltage and frequency of the grid.
To develop the storage systems: At this moment,
diverse types of electricity storage systems are being researched and developed. However they are
somewhat expensive but gradually their costs continue to diminish. These systems will participate in
a growing way in the accumulation of electric power
that would address the intermittent character of the
RES, mainly wind and PV.
Submarine transmission: Today, transmission of
electricity by submarine High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) cables is a reality. For island close to a
bigger island or continent, this could be a long term
solution.
The European Union (EU) region has the highest installed capacity and concentration of wind farms in
the world. Figure 3.1 shows cumulative installed capacity in different countries in Europe. EU is also the
region that has seen the most intense development of
wind energy related activities at all levels i.e., research
& development, technology, manufacturing, wind
resource assessment techniques, meteorology, project
execution, off-shore projects, financing and policy.
It still remains hub of activities leading to technol-
20000
15000
10000
5000
Luxembourg
Cyprus
Switzerland
Czech Rep
Lithuania
Croatia
Estonia
Hungary
Finland
Bulgaria
Norway
Belgium
Austria
Greece
Ireland
Romania
The Netherlands
Turkey
Austria
Poland
Sweden
Portugal
Denmark
Italy
France
UK
Spain
0
Germany
MW
25000
23
Nuclear
Hydro
Fuel Oil
14%
16%
5%
Wind
13%
Coal
19%
PV
9%
Gas
23%
Capacity (MW)
30,000
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
0
Germany
Spain
Source: (WWEA)
24
UK
Italy
France
3.2 China
(This section is mainly authorised by Prof. Shan de
Chang of Chinese Wind Energy Association). At
the end of 2013, China1 with 91.4 GW of installed
capacity stood tall in the worldwide wind energy
market. By the end of 2014, the country crossed
the 114 GW figure with more than 23 GW of new
capacity installed in 2014. China has overwhelmed
the world with the pace at which it has added wind
power capacity. In 2013 & 2014, Chinese wind
power industry continued to grow faster in comparison with other major markets, notably USA,
Europe and India. New installations in 2013 and
2014 have grown at a rate of nearly 25% year by
year after 2012. Cumulative installed capacity at
the end of 2013 is presented in Figure 3.4. Apart
from these huge installations in China, by the end
of 2014, more than 1760 MW of wind turbines
manufactured in China were also exported to many
countries. Thus China has also consolidated its position as the manufacturing hub of wind turbines.
The stupendous growth in China follows enactment
of the Chinese Renewable Energy Law in 2005. The
Figure 3.4: Cumulative Installed Capacity China
120000
100000
(MW)
80000
60000
40000
20000
0
This part of the article is written with support from Prof. Shen de Chang of Chinese Wind Energy Association.
25
law, apart from enabling financial and tax incentives, requires power grid operators to purchase electricity from registered renewable energy producers.
The impact of such a policy measure is clearly visible
in the developments that have taken place. Annual
growth rates in cumulative capacity (Figure 3.5)
show two peaks, one in 1997, when the capacities
were very small and more than 100% growth was
possible and the second one in 2007, a direct result
of the 2005 RE Law. The compound annual growth
rate (CAGR) in cumulative wind farm installations
between 1995 and 2013 is 54.8%.
In 2014, 20.16 GW of new wind farm capacity
was connected to the public electric grid in China
and by the end of 2014, the total accumulated capacity of wind turbines connected with public grid
in China was about 97.32 GW, constituting 6.2%
of the total electricity generation capacity in the
country.
Chinas onshore wind energy resources are mainly
in the Three Norths (Northwest, Northeast &
North China), accounting for more than 90% of
Chinas total wind energy resources. Two-thirds of
the power requirement in China is concentrated in
the eastern and central regions.
The regions of western Inner Mongolia, eastern Inner Mongolia, Gansu, and northern Hebei have
highest wind power installed capacity in China.
However due to small electricity load centers only
10% of the total electricity produced can be consumed. Figure 3.6 presents an interesting picture of
wind generation vis--vis consumption as a percentage of the total national electricity consumption in
these regions.
At present, the predominant models being installed
in China are in the 1.5- 2.0 MW range. In the new
installations, the 1.5 MW and 2 MW wind turbines
constituted 81% and 83% respectively of the accumulated installation capacity by the end of 2014.
Off-shore wind farms are also being set up, some of
them in the inter-tidal zone. By the end of 2014,
more than 657 MW of offshore wind farms had
been installed and connected to the grid. Doubly
fed 3 MW WTGs, 2.5 MW direct drive WTGs and
4 MW WTGs have been used in the off-shore wind
farms. Several 5 MW and 6 MW WTGs are also
being tested in offshore projects. In 2014, among
Chinese markets of onshore and offshore wind power, domestic WTGs accounts to 98.3% and foreign
WTGs accounts for 1.7%.
140%
120%
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
26
Figure 3.6: Wind generation v/s consumption of wind generated electricity (% of total) 8
60.00%
51.30%
Percent of total (%)
50.00%
40.00%
30.00%
20.00%
18.10%
12%
10.00%
0.00%
3.30%
Western Inner
Mongolia
11.60%
9.70%
0.70%
Eastern Inner
Mongolia
Wind Generation
3.40%
2%
Gansu
9.30%
Northern Heibei
Total
Wind Consumed
27
Figure 3.7: Trends in electricity generation from renewable energy as Percent of total electricity generation
25.0%
Percentage (%)
20.0%
15.0%
Hydro
wind
10.0%
others
5.0%
0.0%
2004
2009
2014
Percentage (%)
2.5%
2.0%
1.5%
1.0%
0.5%
0.0%
2009
2010
2011
28
2012
2013
2014
nia in early eighties. This was a pioneering development that lead to wind farm activity in many other
countries in Europe and Asia (India at that time), creating a worldwide wind turbine market and a push
for further technology development.
Even prior to the first wind farm, after the oil crisis
and between 1974 and 1980, the US government
worked with industry to advance the technology
and enable large commercial wind turbines. NASA
through its Lewis research centre in Sandusky Ohio
29
3.4 India
India, with nearly 24 GW of wind power capacity
ranks 5th in the world and very soon is likely to take
over Spain in the 4th position (Figure 3.12). Capacity addition in 2015-16 is expected to be around
4000 MW. Growth in wind power development has
been exponential as can be seen in Figure 3.13. The
government has ambitious plans to achieve 40 GW
of installed capacity by 2020 and a Wind Mission
is being considered by the government to bring the
capacity to 100 GW.
Today (end of 2014) US has nearly 66 GW of installed capacity and the experts9 are of the view that
the new wind farms can produce electricity at 5-8
cents/kWh, making them cost competitive with
conventional power.
Like Europe and US, India too has been a pioneering nation in wind energy and the first wind farms
that were set up India in 1986 were also the first
wind farms in Asia. After the first demonstration
projects, the Government of India launched a wind
energy program with seriousness and many policy
measures and currently a FiT regime in most of the
states continues to create an enabling environment
in wind energy investments. India is also perhaps
the only country that has dedicated a full fledged
ministry to renewable energy.
Major Wind farm capacities in US are in Texas, California, Iowa, Illinois & Oregon (see Figure 3.11)
Today, there are nearly 20 wind turbine manufacturers in India with about 52 turbine models certi-
Capacity (GW)
10.0
8.0
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
Texas
30
California
Iowa
Illinois
Oregon
sion (MERC), after a process of stake-holder consultation, came up with a landmark regulation on
wind and set the tariff for wind farms at Rs. 3.5
with an escalation clause. This opened up the wind
market in Maharashtra. Subsequently State Electricity Regulatory Commissions have become active in
nearly all the states and based on the wind regime in
Figure 3.13: Annual growth rates of cumulative wind farm capacity (India)
250%
150%
100%
50%
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988
0%
1987
200%
31
3.5 Africa
The Power Grid Corporation of India Limited (PGCIL) which is responsible for maintaining high
voltage transmission network in the country is
working on development of a so called green corridor which will essentially lead to strengthening
140
120
100
80
China
60
India
US
40
EU
20
Year
32
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
Ethopia, Tunisia, Egypt, South Africa and Morocco account for nearly all the wind power capacity
in Africa.
The first wind project in Africa was a pilot wind
farm of 400 kW (4 X 100) capacity set up at Ras
Gharib in Egypt, near the Gulf of Suez, in 1988.
Between 1993 and 1996, a second project of 5.4
MW capacity came up at Hughada city. Till 2000,
the total wind farm capacity in Egypt was nearly
6 MW. Egypts first commercial wind project was
the first phase of the Zafarana wind farm (30 MW)
commissioned in 2001. Seven subsequent phases of
Zafarana have since been completed, bringing the
farms capacity to 545 MW as of 2010.
There are currently three ongoing developments on
the Gulfs of Suez and El Zayt which are expected
to add another 200 MW capacity each, and the expansion of the Hurghada wind farm which is expected to have an installed capacity of 1,100 MW
at completion.
Morocco added 203 MW in 2013, bringing its total
installed capacity to 495 MW at year end. Alstom
1.67 MW turbines make up the 101.9 MW at Akhfenir, while the remaining 101.2 MW is split equally
3.6 Analysis
Trends of growth in wind power installations in
different regions of the world presented in Figure
3.15 are interesting. A sudden spurt in growth is
seen in the cumulative installation in China as it
overtakes India in 2008 and afterwards emerges as
Numero Uno country in wind farm installations.
Cumulative installed capacities by regions presented in Table 3.1 below and Figures 3.15 to Figure
120.00
Asia
100.00
EU
80.00
US & Can
60.00
Latin America
Africa
40.00
20.00
0.00
2010
2011
2012
2013
33
Asia
EU
US & Can
Latin America
Africa
2010
62.30
85.00
44.21
1.86
0.90
2.56
2011
83.45
94.50
52.17
2.91
0.99
2.55
2012
98.50
106.40
66.20
4.85
1.09
3.13
2013
116.94
117.30
68.70
6.66
1.49
3.69
6.00
5.00
4.00
Latin America
Africa
3.00
2011
34
2012
2013
Grids with substantial wind penetration and possibly with storage devices along with solar or biofuel form the basis of energy system for communities and industry in Africa. This is also be true for
many parts of Asia and Latin America.
With wind power development picking up in many
countries of Asia such as Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, Malaysia, Pakistan, Japan as well as the central Asian countries and parts of the MENA region,
Asia, in all likelihood will surpass Europe and US in
total installed capacities. We feel the coming decade
shall be a decade of growth of wind power development in Asia.
arrive at an annual consumption level of 74 thousand TWh. Differential growth in electricity consumption for different regions is discussed later in
this chapter.
Different agencies such as IEA or WEC, though
their modeling exercises have come up with different scenarios of total electricity production by 2050
but most of them are comparable and fall in the
range of 40000 TWh 74000 TWh.
In the WWEA wind resource report, we have seen
that the world has vast wind power potential. The
constraints to its utilization may emanate from
30.0
20.0
10.0
Actual
2049
2046
2043
2040
2037
2034
2031
2028
2025
2022
2019
2016
2013
2010
2007
2004
2001
1998
1995
1992
1989
1986
1983
1980
1977
1974
1971
0.0
Projected
35
Symphony
46%
70%
Generation from wind
36
4 thousand TWh
When looking at future, there can be many possible scenarios. For example, World Energy Council
(WEC) has developed two scenarios13, one of them
Jazz scenario and the other Symphony scenario. The
two scenarios are described as follows:
Under Jazz scenario WEC forecasts, world electricity production at 53.6 thousand TWh and under
Symphony scenario, 47.9 thousand TWh. The projections vary according to the policy and technology
thrust in different areas.
According to International Energy Agency (IEA) ,
in its outlook extending up to 2050, in two of its
climate friendly scenarios, 2DS and hiRen, total
electricity production is of the order of 42 - 40
thousand TWh with variable renewable energy
comprising of solar, onshore and offshore wind and
ocean energy contributing 22% to 32% electricity
generation. In its wind energy technology roadmap
201315, IEA for the year 2050 has indicated a total
share of wind at 14% of the total in 2DS and 18%
in hiRen, amounting to 5.9 and 7.6 thousand TWh
14
37
4500
4000
US
3500
Germany
3000
UK
2500
France
2000
Japan
1500
1000
China
500
India
0
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Year
trends cannot be ignored and present a realistic picture. Therefore, Figure 4.1 presents a realistic picture and in terms of order of magnitude is in close
agreement with projections.
An examination of electricity production trends in
select developed and developing countries (Figure
4.2) shows that while electricity production in developed countries like US, Japan has remained stable, in developing countries it has been on the rise.
Coal
25%
Hydr
20%
NG
NU
15%
Oil
10%
5%
0%
2004
2005
2006
2007
38
2008
2009
2010
2011
25000
20000
Total
Coal
15000
Hydr
NG
10000
NU
Oil
5000
0
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
39
Growth
3
2.5
2
1.5
1
0.5
0
Australia
US
Europe
Latin America
Asia
Africa
y = 0.1242x + 0.6655
R = 0.9467
Growth
3
2.5
2
y = 0.0128x + 0.9173
R = 0.8854
1.5
1
0.5
0
Australia
40
US
Europe
Latin America
Asia
Africa
3.5
Australia
US
Growth
2.5
Europe
Latin America
1.5
Asia
Africa
Poly. (Asia)
0.5
11
10
2000
99
98
97
96
95
94
93
92
91
and its management practice will evolve around absorbing maximum wind power into the grid, while
retaining stability in power system and power supply.
In Chapter 4.0 later in this report based on work by
Farid et. al, we examine how the transition in electricity grid is taking place.
An interesting test of how a power system could survive massive fluctuation in renewable energy happened in March 20, 2015, when Europe faced near
total Solar Eclipse.
Germany has more Renewable Power installed, including Solar of 38.5 GW and a similar capacity of wind power,
more than any other nation in Europe. There was a great concern that the solar eclipse would lead to a collapse
of the electricity grid.
On the day solar eclipse was scheduled to occur, Engineers operating the grid were concerned with a massive,
sudden drop in solar electricity input - followed by a massive increase when the eclipse came to an end later in the
morning. This was going to be the test of the newly evolved German grid with high renewable energy penetration.
There had never been such a massive and rapid drop and rapid increase in solar power before in Germany.
The eclipse cut off 65 to 80 percent of incoming sunlight. It was a stress test for theEnergiewende- the countrys
massive shift toward renewable energies. It was an opportunity to show that its possible to deal successfully with
large-scale fluctuations in renewable energy input, whether from sudden increases and decreases in solar energy
or in wind power.
At the time of eclipse, solar power dropped from 14 GW to 7 GW and then rose to 20 GW as the eclipse ended.
However, the grid operators (TSOs) managed to keep the power system stable.
A question often posed of grid security with high penetration of renewables had been successfully addressed
through actual demonstration under massive fluctuation, which is not encountered under day to day operations
41
Looking at the overall policy and development scenario, plans in different countries and the technological evolution, up to 40% wind penetration can
be safely assumed for the year 2050. However, when
looking at future, one has to allow for many possibilities and scenarios that can take place. It is possible that worldwide electricity consumption does
not increase to as high a value as 74000 TWh/yr
as mentioned in the scenarios discussed above but
remains at a low of 40000 TWh/yr. This can be due
to some of the following or more reasons:
v
Climate change
v Significant variations in trends due to social, political and economic reasons
v Technological development and other competing technologies etc.
Due to the same reasons, wind power generation
could also possibly vary from the highest expected
point to a rather low point. The different scenarios
that we have considered are LOW, LIKELY, and
HIGH both in total electricity requirements and
wind penetration levels. These levels are summarized in Table 4.2 below.
8000
12000
16000
LOW= 20%
11400
17100
22800
LIKELY = 30%
14800
22200
29600
HIGH = 40%
42
W
I
N
D
30000.0
25000.0
20000.0
Low = 20%
15000.0
Likely = 30%
High = 40%
10000.0
5000.0
0.0
Low = 40000
Likely = 57000
High = 74000
16.0
14.0
12.0
10.0
Low = 20%
8.0
Likely = 30%
High = 40%
6.0
4.0
2.0
0.0
Low = 40000
Likely = 57000
High = 74000
Figures 4.8 and 4.9 indicate the scenario assessments arrived at. In arriving at Figures in TW in
Figure 4.8 we have assumed a Capacity Utilization
Factor of 20%.
From Figure 4.9 it can be seen that the possibilities range from a low of 8000 TWh/yr or 4.6 TW of
wind power to high of 29600 TWh/yr or 16.9 TW. In
these scenarios, we feel renewable energy in combination with hydro and solar could possibly reach 100%
43
44
Worldwide growth and expansion in wind power installations has led to nearly 370 GW of installed capacity by the end of 2014. With many countries and
regions having ambitious plans to add wind power
to their power grid, this capacity is likely to grow
manifold in the coming years. In the previous chapters, we have highlighted the environmental, energy
access and energy security issues that will continue
to drive wind and solar power generation. On the
other hand, new technologies and approaches that
bring about greater efficiencies in energy generation,
transmission and consumption are poised to play a
very important role in energy saving. All this means
that the focus in the power sector shifts from large
centralized thermal or nuclear generating plants to
small distributed generation, demand side management, consumer play and evacuation of power from
these distributed plants.
In the last few years, wind and solar energy have
emerged as a mainstream energy options for the grid
and in order to absorb inherently fluctuating energy
from these sources, the conventional power grid itself has to undergo a dramatic change. This aspect
must be looked upon as a part of Energiewende (or
Energy Transition). This paper, drawing upon some
of the ideas presented in the work of Farid et. al17,
ponders on the shape and role of the grid in future
with distributed renewable energy generation and
smart grid options.
45
46
47
48
Generation Supply
Stochastic/ Forecasted
Load Demand
49
dispatchable generation units with many and highly predictable loads16. Variations span a wide range
of frequencies with slow variations having larger
magnitude that correspond to the daily periodicity
of the demand. These multiple time scales excite and
affect the different behavioral phenomena in the
power grid shown in Figure 6.1. Over time, load
became highly predictable with the state-of theart forecast error being approximately 3%28,29,30.
Consequently, different types of generation fulfilled different parts of the load: large coal/nuclear
power plants supply the base load, combined cycle
Lightning-over voltages
Line switching voltages
Sub-synchronous resonance
Transient stability
Long-term dynamics
Tie-line regulation
Daily load following
10-7
10-6
10-5
10-4
10-3
10-2
10-1
10-0
101
101
103
104
105
50
Past
Generation Supply
Load Demand
Well-Controlled &
Dispatchable
Thermal Units:
Environmentally
unsustainable
Demand Side
Management
(Needs Control &
market design)
Stochastic/
Forecasted
Conventional Loads:
Growing and need
curtailment
51
52
economic control objectives which enable holistic dynamic properties. The economic aspects are
driven by global, national or regional policy and
regulatory regime. The five dynamic properties to
be addressed are dispachability, flexibility, forecastability, stability and resilience. Consequently, as the
power grids physical and cyber layers continue to
evolve, it may become clearer how these properties
improve or degrade. To that effect, these dynamic
properties may be holistically enabled by the wealth
of new supply and demand side resources. First,
generation and demand are set to take much more
equal responsibility over power grid operation. This
appears in not only in the degree of forecast ability
but also in the degree of dispatchability and flexibility. Furthermore, the combination of these three
properties suggests a grid that is generally more dynamic in nature, and so requires specific attention
to ramping capabilities and dynamic stability. Finally, the transformation of a power grids structure
from one that is topologically fixed to one that
is composed of actively and readily switched microgrids suggests the need for resilience. Table 6.3
shows the balanced role of generation and demand
in regard to these five dynamic control properties.
An expanded version of this discussion can be
found elsewhere22.
53
Demand
v Low Lighting
Hydro
Flexibility/Ramping
(Thermal Energy to
Work Ratio
v Low Solar PV
v Low N/A
Stability
harmonic control
54
making and actuation shown in Figure 6.3. Although the transmissions system continues to
introduce new control technology, perhaps the
most evident upgrades appear in the distribution
system; further blurring the distinction between
the two systems. For example, in the measurement
and communication infrastructure SCADA56, as
a well-established transmission technology that
is quickly entering distribution space. In complement, smart meters55,57,58,59, phasor measurement
units60, and dynamic line ratings61,62 have received
a great deal of attention in both academia and industry. In decision-making, transmission energy
management systems functionality is being repackaged in distribution management systems63,64. An
extension of these is facility energy management
systems which can integrate with the power grid65.
Finally, a bloom of actuation devices is set to appear all along the power value chain. Virtual and
real generation aggregators are being developed
for economics oriented control in both generation
and demand66,67,68. To that effect, model predictive
Measurement
Generation
Actuation
Transmission Distribution
Demand
Driven by Environment or De-carbonization, Reliability, Distributed Generation with Renewable Energy, Transportation electrification, Consumer participation and Deregulation future grid will undergo
technical, economic and regulatory changes to bring
about the incorporation of renewable energy and incentivized demand side management and control. As
a result, the power grid will experience fundamental
changes in its system structure and behavior that will
consequently require enhanced and integrated control, automation, and IT-driven management functions in what is called enterprise control.
55
56
7. Concluding Remarks
The world energy system, which is predominantly
hydrocarbon based must now undergo a transition
to make way for a renewable energy based system
in which wind energy plays the predominant mainstream role. The planetary environmental concerns,
energy access and energy security issues, the geopolitics of oil and resulting conflicts in many parts
of the world, all these aspects point towards the urgent need for this transition or Energiewende as it
is called.
WWEA in its earlier WWEA Wind Resource Report (2014) has assessed the worldwide potential
to be of the order of 95 TW, which is more than
adequate to meet the electricity requirements of the
world in combination with other renewable energy
options.
Today with wind contributing nearly 4% of overall electricity generation, 370 GW of installed generation capacity and deployment in more than 100
countries; modern wind turbines have made the
transition from a fringe technology to a mainstream
electricity generation option. Technology continues
to evolve with greater elements of innovation, engineering complexity and technical finesse. We can
say a modern wind turbine is a smart wind turbine
capable of un-attended operation even in extreme
climates such as offshore regions. Many new ideas
and initiatives are being experimented with and this
may further change the technology landscape.
57
58
3.
4.
5.
6.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g. Transmission planning keeping in view areas with high wind resource, load centers
and different types of loads such as agricultural, water pumping, industrial etc.
7. Transport sector will increasingly get linked to
electricity grid through battery storage systems.
This too will lead to enhancement of renewable
energy in the grid.
8. Increasingly we foresee the need for part load
operation of conventional power plants.
9. There shall be emergence and proliferation of
many new technologies in the area of innovative storage systems, automated control options,
sensors and power electronics that will support
grid integration of renewable energy.
10. There is a need for technological modifications
in wind turbines to enable better control and
grid friendly operation or power factor adjustments.
11. Policy and regulatory mechanisms and grid
codes will also evolve accordingly
12. Mini and micro grids will emerge in countries
and regions with sparse electricity networks.
Such regions have the option of setting up networks designed for RE Integration from a
conceptual and design stage. Africa is one such
region.
13. Islands need to develop new and innovative approaches to harness abundant wind energy. The
challenge will be the size of the network (mini
and micro grids) and higher variability on account of the scale and size.
14. In a future energy mix by 2050, under a most
likely scenario we expect around 9.8 TW of
wind power installations generating nearly
17000 TWh/yr
15. Apart from distributed generation, we also see
the possibility of large blocks or parks of windfarms of the order of 1 GW getting established
on onshore and offshore regions with dedicated
transmission lines and other power evacuation
ancillaries fort grid connection. Such large parks
and windfarms are likely to be managed by large
IPPs or utilities themselves.
59
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