SuperGrid or SmartGrid: Competing strategies for large-scale integration of intermittent renewables?

Morten Blarke, Bryan M. Jenkins

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

51 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper defines and compares two strategies for integrating intermittent renewables: SuperGrid and SmartGrid. While conventional energy policy suggests that these strategies may be implemented alongside each other, the paper identifies significant technological and socio-economic conflicts of interest between the two.

The article identifies differences between a domestic strategy for the integration of intermittent renewables, vis-à-vis the SmartGrid, and a cross-system strategy, vis-à-vis the SuperGrid. Policy makers and transmission system operators must understand the need for both strategies to evolve in parallel, but in different territories, or with strategic integration, avoiding for one strategy to undermine the feasibility of the other. A strategic zoning strategy is introduced from which attentive societies as well as the global community stand to benefit.

The analysis includes a paradigmatic case study from West Denmark which supports the hypothesis that these strategies are mutually exclusive. The case study shows that increasing cross-system transmission capacity jeopardizes the feasibility of SmartGrid technology investments.

A political effort is required for establishing dedicated SmartGrid innovation zones, while also redefining infrastructure to avoid the narrow focus on grids and cables. SmartGrid Investment Trusts could be supported from reallocation of planned transmission grid investments to provide for the equitable development of SmartGrid strategies.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEnergy Policy
Volume58
Pages (from-to)381-390
Number of pages9
ISSN0301-4215
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2013

Keywords

  • Intermittent renewables integration; SmartGrid; SuperGrid

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