Germany
shifts to coal to tackle its installed capacity shortfall
27
October, 2012
In
October Germany added coal-fired capacity to its generation mix, with
Vattenfall increasing coal-fired capacity at the Boxberg R Plant in
the state of Saxony by 675MW. However, this is tiny compared with the
12,696MW of nuclear capacity that is required to shut down by 2022.
Germany's Energiewende "energy switch" calls for a phase
out of nuclear by 2022, using renewables to replace the lost
capacity. New coal capacity in Germany is therefore surprising given
the government's enthusiasm for pursuing low-carbon generation.
However,
this change raises massive challenges with consequences for the
country's energy security and the profits of its utility companies.
Essentially, Germany is faced with the challenge of connecting the
dots between the source of generation power - in particular from
renewable offshore wind farms in the north of the country - to where
electricity is demanded, such as to factories and businesses in the
south and east. The lines to join the dots - high voltage
transmission lines, to be precise - are running behind schedule.
Germany has 72 projects that have already started or should have
started, representing some 5,400km of lines. A portion of these lines
has been delayed due to public objections as well as bureaucratic
delays, and a further 600km of lines that the four network companies
(TenneT, Ampiron, 50Hertz, and TransnetBW) have agreed is necessary
faces potential delay due to public consultation. Clearly, more gas
and coal plants will need to be added to meet demand. Germany's
network development plan forecasts almost the same amount of hard
coal in 2023 as now, and only about 2% less brown coal compared with
2012. The main replacement of the lost nuclear capacity will be from
solar and wind - but even if these are built, the lines still need to
be there. Coal's low cost is driving other countries to pursue this
generation. The UK looks set to burn up its quota of coal-fired
generation capacity before 2015; meanwhile, Datamonitor notes that
countries on Europe's periphery that are exempt from European Union
low carbon regulations are also pragmatic about adding coal to their
mix. For example, Turkey is adding new coal-fired generation
capacity. In August 2012 the state coal authority TKI opened a tender
for the construction and operation of two coal fields, which is just
the second of a line of tenders that will contribute to the new
17-18GW of coal capacity desired by the government for 2023.
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