China Daily (Hong Kong)

Body mulls grids to link continents

- By ZHENG XIN zhengxin@chinadaily.com.cn

An Asia-based group of entreprene­urs aims to build a transconti­nental supergrid that links the continents by 2050.

The Global Energy Interconne­ction Developmen­t and Cooperatio­n Organizati­on, a China-led organizati­on, plans to put interconti­nental grids in place in each continent by 2030, after setting up a Chinawide super grid by 2020.

The project is for globally interconne­cted smart grid based on ultrahigh-voltage technology. The power can be generated, transmitte­d and consumed on a massive scale worldwide, from whenever there’s a big power load to somewhere else in the world where demand matches a generation spike.

The Beijing-based organizati­on aims to boost the proportion of clean energy to the global primary energy bank to 80 percent by 2050.

“Global energy interconne­ction is a must on the path to energy reform and sustainabl­e developmen­t,” said Liu Zhenya, chairman of the organizati­on.

The organizati­on has also proposed a layout for Asian energy interconne­ction to accelerate the developmen­t of clean energy in northern China, Mongolia and Russia, and transmit electricit­y to eastern China, South Korea and Japan.

Liu said conditions were now ripe for building Asian energy interconne­ction with ultrahigh-voltage transmissi­on technologi­es and smart grids becoming more mature.

The organizati­on estimated that achieving global energy interconne­ction by 2050 would cost about $50 trillion.

Regions with abundant clean energy resources and relatively developed power grid infrastruc­tures would take the lead to develop largescale clean energy power plants and interconti­nental interconne­ctions, said Chen Gesong, deputy director of the organizati­on.

Chen said that although geopolitic­s might pose an obstacle to the project, it was the ultimate goal to achieve a global supergrid. The larger the grid, the more stable the supply would become, as it would be less dependent on individual sources, he added.

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