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EGEC highlights flexibility of geothermal in European electricity market

In a recently published position paper, the European Geothermal Energy Council (EGEC) highlights the flexibility that geothermal energy offers to the European electricity market.

In a position paper published July 12, 2018, the European Geothermal Energy Council (EGEC) provides its view on why geothermal energy is a key player for flexibility in the electricity market of Europe.

The (EU) Electricity Market Regulation considers renewable power production only as a source of instability, due to the variable or intermittent production of PV and wind technologies. It introduces Capacity Remuneration Mechanisms for dispatchable or flexible generation able to provide grid services to stabilize an electricity market with high renewable penetration.

Yet, the debate ignores the potential of flexible renewable production, i.e. geothermal, to provide such grid services.

Geothermal power plants can provide base-load or flexible generation. Their deployment, however, presents several challenges that first need to be overcome. To scale up geothermal electricity generation in Europe, innovative technologies need to be demonstrated and to reach market maturity. While several projects are being developed, they need adequate support to emerge as geothermal is a capital-intensive technology, which presents additional challenges to other resources, notably linked to the technology specific risk .

For new flexible renewable technologies to emerge in the European Electricity Market and provide much needed services to the grid, the Electricity Regulation needs to

Factsheet (pdf)

Source: EGEC

Alexander Richter
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