Power Grid Operators, Experts And Federal Audit Office Warn Of Blackouts As Coal, Nuclear Get Phased Out

Reposted from the NoTricksZone

By P Gosselin on 23. June 2021

As wildly fluctuating, weather-dependent green energies come increasingly online, German grid operators and the German Federal Audit Office are warning the German government of power blackouts. But the government is ignoring the warnings and continues to insist everything is fine.

Grid operator 50Hertz, for example, warns of energy shortages as Germany continues to shut down its nuclear and coal power plants, which currently serve to provide crucial baseload power for the grid.

Germany’s Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (BMWi) refuses to heed the warnings and demands of the Federal Audit Office and the country’s grid operators, insisting: “All our studies show that, on the whole, we have sufficient power for Germany.”

“Momentous misjudgement”

But experts are calling BMWi’s stance “a technical and momentous misjudgement when it comes to power supply security, as will become apparent over the next few years,” reports the online Ruhrkultour here.

The President of the Austrian Society for Crisis Prevention, Herbert Saurugg, an expert for blackout and crisis prevention, says “the consequences of a blackout are being underestimated”.

“In Austria alone, this would mean damages of more than 1 billion euros in the first 24 hours. However, the danger of a sudden, supra-regional and prolonged power, infrastructure and supply failure affecting large parts of Europe is real. Help from outside is not to be expected.” reports the online Ruhrkultour here.

Power shortage warnings are mounting, “no Plan B”

The risk of blackouts are rising due to the unstable supply of growing wind and solar energy. The online Avantour reports:

Warnings of a massive power shortage are mounting. Three nuclear power plants are to be shut down at the end of the year, as are coal-fired power plants. Wind turbines and photovoltaic systems only supply electricity when the wind blows and the sun shines. There is no plan B to which energy policy can fall back.”

Germany will lose 50 GW of stable power

Experts have calculated that the phase-out of nuclear energy and coal-fired power generation means Germany will lose more than 50 gigawatts (GW) of stable power production capacity. Supply stability must be given higher priority, experts say.

Warnings of “considerable consequences”

Citing business daily Handelsblatt, “the energy industry warns of considerable consequences if the issue of secured capacity is not taken seriously.”

For power grid expert Herbert Saurugg, “the danger of a blackout is getting closer and closer if the government does not act,” reports Avantour .

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June 25, 2021 4:53 am

The RE-fanatical German government, which has a “know-it-all”, “follow-our-example”, RE politics-driven mindset, will not learn until it is nuked with blackouts, a la Texas, California, etc.

Germany, during a major freeze in winter, with minimal wind/solar, minimal nukes plants, minimal coal plants, will not be able to generate enough electricity to prevent black-outs.

The “all-our-studies-prove” German government says “we will import what we need”, but nearby countries also will have cold weather, also will have minimal wind/solar, etc.

The heavily subsidized wind/solar/battery fantasy finally will hit the wall, big time.
Stay tuned.

Oh yes, the US government tells the EU and Germany not to buy more low-cost, clean-burning Russian gas, which the EU and Germany desperately needs!

US government hatred/fear of Russia has overruled common sense.

griff
Reply to  Willem Post
June 25, 2021 5:37 am

The German energy ministry is confident that – even in the difficult years just after the nuclear phase-out – this process will not endanger the power supply of companies and households. In a reply to parliamentarians, it wrote in March 2021: “All analyses of supply security known to the federal government and carried out in accordance with the latest scientific findings come to the conclusion that the secure supply of electricity in Germany will remain guaranteed at the current high level for the foreseeable future. The analyses also take into account the phase-out of nuclear energy and the end of coal-fired power generation.

MarkW
Reply to  Willem Post
June 25, 2021 6:03 am

In your opinion, it makes sense to make your economy dependent on a ruthless dictator who has a history of using economic resources to force other countries to behave in ways that only benefit Russia?

John Sandhofner
June 25, 2021 11:56 am

Do this idiots not understand that without massive battery backup (which don’t exist) there are times when the sun don’t shine and the wind isn’t blowing. Every night like clockwork the sun sets. You can count on it. The wind is a lot hard to schedule because of it’s variability. You will always need a certain amount of coal and nuclear on line available to back up solar and wind when they are fail to perform.