Stable and Renewable: Assessing the Reliability of a Fully Renewable European Energy System

Abstract

The transformation of the energy system has raised concerns about the reliability of fully renewable energy systems. We address this question for a 2050 European energy system using an economically optimal adequacy assessment. Our results show that a cost-optimal, fully renewable European system can be as reliable as a fossil-based one, with an average loss of load of only 0.03% due to variability in renewable generation. Outages primarily affect industrial and service sectors, while household supply remains largely uninterrupted. Regional differences in supply security emerge, with outages concentrated in countries with a low Value of Lost Load (VoLL). We demonstrate that system reliability can be fully ensured at negligible additional cost (+0.17%) by modestly increasing hydrogen turbine (+10%) and battery capacities (+15%) beyond the cost-optimal levels. We conclude that well-designed renewable energy systems are stable, with hydrogen-based backup being a key enabler of reliability.

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