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27
'23
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Hitachi News
HITACHI ENERGY SELECTED TO SECURE LARGE-SCALE RENEWABLE INTEGRATION IN SCOTLAND
Five large HVDC systems in Scotland will transmit wind power to the south, playing a key role in the UK's energy transition.
The HVDC converter station at Blackhillock, Scotland, one of the two stations in the Caithness Moray Link
Hitachi Energy has been selected by SSEN Transmission, part of the UK energy giant SSE plc, to supply multiple onshore high-voltage direct current (HVDC) converter stations to accelerate the integration of bulk renewables into the UK power grid.
The agreement includes the deployment of up to five HVDC "power corridors," or electricity transmission superhighways, to enable large amounts of future renewable power to be transported from northern Scotland to areas of higher consumption in the south. Each of these connection systems has a capacity of up to 2 gigawatts (GW) and a voltage level of 525 kilovolts (kV). The total 10 GW of renewable electricity capacity would provide the equivalent power consumption for around 10 million UK homes.
The links will help secure power transmission in the northern UK and support the integration of new renewable electricity generation in Scotland as part of the UK's Net Zero Strategy. HVDC transmission will play a key role in bringing this vast amount of renewable power to communities across the country.
This framework agreement reinforces how Hitachi Energy's state-of-the-art HVDC technology can be deployed effectively and how new business models enable the scale needed to speed up the energy transition. This new approach allows Hitachi Energy to plan in advance to increase manufacturing capacity, expand and train the workforce, and maximize standardization to increase synergies between successive projects.
Hitachi Energy will supply its voltage source converter (VSC) converter stations, which convert AC to DC for efficient, long-distance transmission and DC to AC, where the electricity is returned to the grid.
The first two projects under the framework agreement between Arnish-Beauly and Spittal-Peterhead have already been defined. The three additional projects are flexible in location, and to be defined as large-scale studies are finalized. The HVDC links are expected to enter operation in 2030 and onwards.
Hitachi Energy is collaborating with SSE on several key HVDC projects in the UK, such as the Caithness Moray and Shetland links, allowing efficient transmission of renewable power, increasing the reliability in the mainland grid, and improving the security of supply as well as the Dogger Bank Windfarm project, the largest offshore wind farm in the world.
Hitachi Energy has been selected by SSEN Transmission, part of the UK energy giant SSE plc, to supply multiple onshore high-voltage direct current (HVDC) converter stations to accelerate the integration of bulk renewables into the UK power grid.
The agreement includes the deployment of up to five HVDC "power corridors," or electricity transmission superhighways, to enable large amounts of future renewable power to be transported from northern Scotland to areas of higher consumption in the south. Each of these connection systems has a capacity of up to 2 gigawatts (GW) and a voltage level of 525 kilovolts (kV). The total 10 GW of renewable electricity capacity would provide the equivalent power consumption for around 10 million UK homes.
The links will help secure power transmission in the northern UK and support the integration of new renewable electricity generation in Scotland as part of the UK's Net Zero Strategy. HVDC transmission will play a key role in bringing this vast amount of renewable power to communities across the country.
This framework agreement reinforces how Hitachi Energy's state-of-the-art HVDC technology can be deployed effectively and how new business models enable the scale needed to speed up the energy transition. This new approach allows Hitachi Energy to plan in advance to increase manufacturing capacity, expand and train the workforce, and maximize standardization to increase synergies between successive projects.
Hitachi Energy will supply its voltage source converter (VSC) converter stations, which convert AC to DC for efficient, long-distance transmission and DC to AC, where the electricity is returned to the grid.
The first two projects under the framework agreement between Arnish-Beauly and Spittal-Peterhead have already been defined. The three additional projects are flexible in location, and to be defined as large-scale studies are finalized. The HVDC links are expected to enter operation in 2030 and onwards.
Hitachi Energy is collaborating with SSE on several key HVDC projects in the UK, such as the Caithness Moray and Shetland links, allowing efficient transmission of renewable power, increasing the reliability in the mainland grid, and improving the security of supply as well as the Dogger Bank Windfarm project, the largest offshore wind farm in the world.
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