The latest recommendations indicate that European member states should ensure cross-border interconnection capacity of 15 percent of peak demand or of installed variable renewable generation capacity, depending on which is higher, by 2030, to avoid any significant curtailments of wind and solar generation while providing high quality and continuity of electricity supply.
Today this percentage varies greatly between European countries. Denmark, whose cross-border transmission capacity is more or less equal to its demand, is an exceptional case, which highlights the benefits of a strongly connected power grid. When there is excess wind power generation in Denmark – it can sometimes reach 150-160% of local demand – it exports surplus electricity via subsea cables and overhead lines to its neighbors. Norwegian consumers, for example, can use Danish green electricity while Norway’s domestic production is stored in hydroelectric reserves. When Danish domestic power supplies are insufficient, consumers receive Norwegian hydroelectricity.
The recent energization of the NordLink project, a 623-km long HVDC interconnection linking German and Norwegian power markets enables the integration of renewables from both countries. The connection provides the German power grid with reliable access to hydropower resources in Norway, and Norway access to Germany’s substantial base of renewable energy, particularly wind and solar energy resources.