DOE Considers New Grid Strategy for Renewables

The Biden administration is considering a largely unused strategy to bring renewable energy projects online sooner and at a lower cost, according to E&E News (subscription).

Whats going on: The concept is called advanced reconductoring, and studies show it holds the potential to help break a growing logjam in delivering new renewable power to meet the Biden administrations steep clean energy goals.

  • The idea is to restring existing high-voltage towers with new cables employing state-of-the-art carbon fiber or aluminum alloy materials.

Why its important: The wires are capable of carrying up to twice the current of conventional steel and aluminum cables, which in turn would accelerate a surge in transmission capacity without the long wait times and landowner fights that have plagued many earlier projects.

  • Advanced reconductoring, which uses existing transmission lines, could do much of the heavy lifting in helping the U.S. reach President Bidens decarbonization goals.
  • A reconductoring project could cost half as much as a new transmission line and be ready far sooner, the Department of Energy reported in 2020.

However [I]nitial sticker shock poses a big obstacle, despite long-term cost gains. Even though reconductoring is cheaper than building new projects, advanced wires are more expensive than traditional wires. DOE concluded the construction cost of advanced cables ranges from 1 翻 to 5 times that of conventional conductors.

  • Whats more, reconductoring may not be the answer to every project, as it is highly location specific, one source told the news outlet.