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by mduerksen
1150 days ago
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Lack of sun/wind in Denmark correlates strongly with lack of sun/wind in Germany and surrounding countries. The importing of electricity works precisely because the surrounding countries still have the "baseline" power plants the article dismisses so boldly. Transmitting electricity over larger distances remains very expensive, which is why the idea of using the African sun for Europe (e.g. Desertec[1]) has stalled [2]. [1] https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertec [2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jmcgdh_0gyo |
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So at the moment there is not a lot to export, and there is not of excess electricity from sun/wind to store.
The next thing is that, for example, The Netherlands needs a lot of green hydrogen for industry. So quite a bit of new wind turbine installations may go to powering that.
Germany has an other problem, building enough transport capacity within the country.
There is a big difference between transporting electricity all the way from Africa, including the question if it is smart to depend on those country for your electricity needs and transporting electricity between countries that border at the North Sea.