Iceland review - 2016, Page 54

Iceland review - 2016, Page 54
52 ICELAND REVIEW ENERGY FOR EVERYONE? A 60-year debate on whether a submarine power cable could be built from Iceland to the UK to export renewable energy at an optimal price was recently reignited. Zoë Robert explores the issue. PHOTOS BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON. The construction of a 1,200-kilometer-long subma- rine power cable, or interconnector, from Iceland to Scotland has been discussed on and off since the 1950s. Called IceLink, the proposed cable would be the longest of its kind in the world and would deliver a volume of up to five Terawatt-hours (TWh) of electricity per annum, providing up to 1.6 million homes in the UK with renewable energy from Iceland, and allowing Iceland to sell electricity at a higher price abroad. In 2014, KPMG named IceLink one of the world’s top 100 inspirational and innovative infrastructure projects. SECURING ENERGY SUPPLIES The idea was first proposed 60 years ago and according to Landsvirkjun, the National Power Company, its feasibility has been regularly assessed over the last 30 years. The debate on whether it should be built was reignited during UK Prime Minister David Cameron’s visit to Iceland for the Northern Future Forum in October. During Cameron’s visit, the first of a British prime minister to Reykjavík since Winston Churchill in 1941, a task force to examine the feasibility of the project was announced. The task force will report back within six months and, should the project go ahead, it is expected to take at least five to six years to complete. According to Björgvin Skúli Sigurðsson, head of marketing and business development at Landsvirkjun, renewed discussion of the project is primarily a result of events abroad rather than at home. “Specifically the increasing demand for power, the security of supply question—where is our energy going to come from in the future?—and the fact that these countries are closing down nuclear, coal-fired and gas power plants for cli- mate change reasons. So it is events outside of Iceland that are bringing these opportunities to Iceland and why it is a much more relevant project now than it was in the past,” he says. Björgvin says that the decommissioning of plants in the UK, aimed at cutting emissions, will result in a drop in existing power generation, leaving a gap which needs to be filled. The British media have regularly reported that homeowners in the UK face a continuing threat of blackouts because of power shortages and also face higher energy bills because of power station closures. “Even if the demand stays flat, where are they going to get new power? It is one of the top priorities ... The EU is asking: ‘Do you want to continue buying gas from Putin? Do you want to continue buying coal or oil from the rest of the world, or do you want to look closer to home and ask ‘well, can we be more diversified in our supply and perhaps more self-sufficient?’” Isobel Rowley, senior press officer at the National Grid in the UK, says that while existing electricity generation capacity is stretched, should IceLink go ahead, it will be many years before the project is realized. “While it is true that electricity margins are tight, National Grid has put in place some addi- tional services to help with the peak winter demands. With these extra services, the situation is manageable. A link with Iceland would be some years in the future and not of immedi- ate help with today’s tight margins,” she commented via email, later adding: “While old coal-fired power stations are coming to the end of their life, new renewable energy is joining the system.” Another potential benefit of the interconnector is that, by definition, it will connect the two countries’ transmission systems, offering bi-directional flows and allowing the UK to ‘store’ any excess energy in Iceland. Storing electricity on a large scale is extremely challenging, even with today’s technologies, but is possible using hydropower, says Björgvin.
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