Achieving a 100% Renewable Grid: Operating Electric Power Systems with Extremely High Levels of Variable Renewable Energy
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Abstract
What does it mean to achieve a 100% renewable grid? Several countries already meet or come close to achieving this goal. Iceland, for example, supplies 100% of its electricity needs with either geothermal or hydropower. Other countries that have electric grids with high fractions of renewables based on hydropower include Norway (97%), Costa Rica (93%), Brazil (76%), and Canada (62%). Hydropower plants have been used for decades to create a relatively inexpensive, renewable form of energy, but these systems are limited by natural rainfall and geographic topology. Around the world, most good sites for large hydropower resources have already been developed. So how do other areas achieve 100% renewable grids?…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 53.49
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 7
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Renewable energy
- Variable renewable energy
- Hydropower
- Photovoltaic system
- Wind power
- Environmental economics
- Grid
- Environmental science
- Affordable and clean energy