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Energy

Interdisciplinary Research Centre
 
Date: 
Tuesday, 21 March, 2023 - 09:00 to 17:00
Event location: 
Online

The need for Net Zero is clear to most. The “Energy Sector” is not the only contributor to man-made greenhouse gas emissions but ultimately it is the way that we use energy that dominates these emissions.

Low/zero carbon generation such as wind turbines, PV panels, nuclear power, natural hydro and related renewable-energy generators are clearly essential to our transition to net zero emissions. This was recognised early and put incentives in place that have been hugely successful in driving down generation costs, shortening project timescales and eliciting private investment. The UK’s CfD has been a particularly noteworthy success.

As the penetration of low-carbon generation rises in the electricity system, a different challenge is revealed – how to ensure that the energy consumer receives the energy when and where it is wanted. Coal, oil and gas gave us flexibility at very low cost and that flexibility is not easy to replace. Energy storage is one of the main solutions to the problem of reconciling supply and demand. The state of policy development around energy storage is very far behind where it should be to meet political commitments, including UK’s net zero grid target of 2035.

This event sets out to expose some of the main issues behind why the policies around energy storage and the other flexibility technologies are less developed than they might be. The key objective is to unearth and to share what possible directions exist and what good practice is already established that can be adopted more broadly.

Free to register: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/policy-masterclass-energy-storage-online-...