Abstract
In order to achieve the Paris climate targets, the German government has developed phased plans and anchored these in an amendment to the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG). This not only defines expansion targets for renewable energy producers, but also the additional amounts of energy that must be available in the electricity grid in future if it is to supply the mobility and building heating sectors, which are currently still powered by fossil fuels. While the lack of grid transport capacities is recognized and discussed in the public debate, another known and critical hurdle is rarely presented here. This is the temporal distribution of power from renewable energies and its effects on the processes involved in controlling the grid balance. By analyzing a target scenario specified in the EEG for 2030 and another for 2040+, which a German economic research institute recommends to policymakers, the aim is to investigate whether their targets can be achieved under the conditions of the natural fluctuations occurring in Germany and the quantities of renewable energy that can be harvested with a reasonable use of resources. The focus is on simulating future generation curves using historical data in such a way that they show the typical weather-driven behaviour to be expected in Germany. Unavoidable Surplus generation is used as efficiently as possible with electricity and hydrogen storage systems. Both scenarios fall considerably short of their targets. CO2-free coverage of the demand specified for the long-term future is only possible with a quantity of generators that is at the limit of what is feasible. The reason for this is that the current plans are obviously based on an unrealistic picture of the temporal distribution of renewable energy output. Achieving the transformation goals in Germany could be much more complex than politicians currently believe and may require a change in strategy sooner or later.
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