RTE and IEA publish study on the technical conditions necessary for a power system with a High Share of Renewables in France Towards 2050
Press release
While France and a growing number of countries around the world have been setting ambitious goals for reaching net-zero emissions, variable renewables like wind and solar energy are set to become the main building blocks in power systems worldwide as countries seek to decarbonise their economies. In a new joint analysis commissioned by the French Ministry for the Ecological Transition, the IEA (International Energy Agency) and RTE (Réseau de Transport d’Electricité) describe four essential areas that policy makers must address when wind and solar PV start to dominate electricity generation.
The new report, Conditions and requirements for the technical feasibility of a power system with a high share of renewables in France towards 2050, outlines four groups of strict conditions that need to be met to integrate very high shares of renewables in a technically secure way in a large and meshed power system such as that of France.
- Power system strength: Even if they still need to be proven at large scale, there is a general scientific consensus that technological solutions to maintain system strength – and therefore stability – without conventional generation exist in several cases. Specific difficulties are expected in the case of a system with a significant share of distributed solar PV. Further assessment of the impacts of distributed PV on the power distribution network and their implications for electricity security is needed.
- System adequacy: This is the ability of a power system to cope with a given load at all times. It can be ensured even in a system mainly based on variable renewables as long as substantial sources of flexibility are available, including demand-response, large-scale storage, peak generation units and well-developed transmission networks and interconnections. The maturity, availability and cost of different flexibility mixes need to be evaluated in further analysis.
- Operational reserves: The sizing of these reserves and the regulatory framework for balancing responsibilities and procurement would need to be substantially revised in a large power system as such that of France. Moreover, forecasting methods for variable renewables would need to be continually improved.
- Grid development: Substantial efforts would be necessary beyond 2030 at both transmission and distribution levels. This requires strong proactive steps and public engagement in long-term planning in order to assess costs and work with citizens on social acceptance of new infrastructure. These efforts can nonetheless be partly integrated into the renewal of ageing network assets.
Xavier Piechaczyk, President of the Managing Board of RTE: “France has committed itself to carbon neutrality by 2050. All the national scenarios foresee more carbon-free electricity and significant volumes of renewable energy by then. While there are no insurmountable technical barriers, to move towards a mix with very high shares of variable renewable energy, you have to look at the scientific, technical and industrial factors: there are still many topics to address. The report suggests a method and roadmaps to tackle these issues.”
Dr Fatih Birol, Executive Director of the IEA: “Many governments around the world are putting net-zero commitments including the European Union, Japan, the UK, and soon the US and China. And if we want to reach these targets, higher renewables is essential, including in France, where the combined share of solar and wind is around 10 percent of the electricity mix today, and where there is a huge room for improvement. Our report looks at the technical implications of this, and how France can be a low-carbon energy champion and build its energy system for tomorrow.”
The joint study marks an important step and is part of a larger work program aimed at developing and comparing scenarios for the long-term transformation of the electricity system to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. On 27 January 2021, RTE will open a public consultation assessing the framework and assumptions of these future scenarios, and will present the conclusions of this consultation in the Fall 2021. (More information can be found on RTE’s website.)