TLDR connecting far-flung regions into one huge grid can mitigate the intermittency of renewables. High-voltage direct current is a good way to do this.
TLDR connecting far-flung regions into one huge grid can mitigate the intermittency of renewables. High-voltage direct current is a good way to do this.
I mean, that's great. But what are the capital costs relative to a local power repository?
The 1,208 km euro-asia subsea power cable will carry 2000 MW of power and cost $745,000 per km, $900 million total
For comparison, this 2013 80% efficient scalable flywheel design costs around $1333 per kW. Handling 2000 MW would cost $1333 x 1000 x 2000 = $2.7 billion
The costs are comparable, but the 1,208 km euro-asia HVDC cable wins unless I fucked up my math or misunderstood how flywheel cost works
The length where flywheels overtake cables is $2.7 billion / $745,000 per km ≈ 3600 km, so flywheels might beat a trans-Atlantic cable, depending on the route
Fair enough. TIL