|
ABB TECHNOLOGY TO BOOST ITALIAN TRANSMISSION GRID
01 March 2007 - ABB Automation Technologies
| Italy has one of the biggest power deficits in the world but faces strong public opposition to the building of new power plants. What to do? ABB is helping Terna, the transmission grid operator, to bridge the capacity gap with a sophisticated and sustainable solution. |
In 2004 Italy consumed 45 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity more than it generated. Much of this shortfall is imported from neighboring Switzerland, France and Austria, but crisis threatens whenever the demand for heating or air conditioning surges during the winter and summer peak periods. With the public demanding a secure supply of power but unwilling to support large infrastructure projects like new power plants, Terna is facing a difficult challenge. Part of the solution lies in Sardinia. Unlike the rest of Italy, Sardinia produces more electricity than it consumes. The problem is that it is an island more than 400 kilometers from the mainland. How can this surplus be transferred across the Mediterranean Sea to the national grid in the most effective and sustainable way? The answer is ABB’s High Voltage Direct Current technology. Plugs island into mainland HVDC is an ABB innovation for delivering large volumes of power across long distances via high-capacity overhead lines or undersea cables with considerably lower transmission losses and less environmental impact than alternative technologies. This particular solution will enable Terna to transfer 1,000 megawatts of surplus electricity from Sardinia, enough to power one million homes, via a 420-kilometer cable and at a depth of up to 1,600 meters to a key substation near Rome, where it will be fed into the mainland grid. “The link significantly increases Terna’s flexibility and options to manage the grid,” says Matteo Marini, global head of front end sales for ABB’s Power Systems division. “It will boost supply to the mainland by the equivalent of two or more generating units without incurring the huge expense and social impact of building a new power plant.” World's second-longest undersea link ABB was awarded the contract for meeting the demanding specifications, which include exceptionally low transmission losses and noise levels at the converter stations, and for its previous track record in supplying Italy’s two existing HVDC links between Sardinia and Tuscany (commissioned in 1967) and Italy and Greece. With a length of 420 kilometers, the interconnection will be the second longest undersea power link in the world, some 160 km shorter than the NorNed link which ABB is supplying to interconnect the power grids of the Netherlands and Norway. The contract calls for ABB to design and deliver two converter stations for existing 400 kV substations at Fiume Santo in Sardinia and Latina on the mainland. The stations include converter transformers and air-insulated and gas-insulated switchgear.
http://www.abb.com
About: ABB Automation Technologies
ABB is a leader in power and automation technologies that enable utility and industry customers to improve performance while lowering environmental impact. The ABB Group of companies operates in around 100 countries and employs around 105,000 people. ABB has streamlined its divisional structure to focus on two core businesses: Power Technologies and Automation Technologies. The Oil, Gas and Petrochemicals division is slated for divestment. ABB Power Technologies serves electric, gas and water utilities as well as industrial and commercial customers, with a broad range of products, systems and services for power transmission, distribution and automation. ABB Automation Technologies blends a robust product and service portfolio with end-user expertise and global presence to deliver solutions for control, motion, protection, and plant integration across the full range of process and utility industries. In addition to ABB's automation activities directed at the oil and gas industries, ABB Lummus Global continues to design and supply production facilities, refineries and petrochemical plants. ABB's former Upstream business, divested in July 2004, is now part of Vetco International (www.vetco.com). |
More News:
For March 2007
From ABB Automation Technologies
For Production Monitoring Equipment
|