A global super-grid: sociotechnical drivers and barriers
Journal article, 2022

Background
One way to design an electricity system wholly based on renewables is referred to as the global Super-grid, a vision of a transmission network of unprecedented geographical scope that uses advanced technology to balance spatially and temporally varying supply and demand across the globe. While proponents, since the 1960s, have argued that a global Super-grid is technologically possible and socially desirable, and significant technical progress has been made since the 1990s, development is slow with new transmission lines being built predominantly with established technology and within the boundaries of single countries.
The aim of this study is to explore sociotechnical drivers and barriers of global Super-grid development. Results A main driver is the century old ideas that larger grids are more efficient and contribute to cooperation and peace. Over the last decades, the level of technical knowledge and networks of proponent have grown. The Super-grid also benefits from the potential opportunity of building on existing grids. Barriers stem from the scale of investments needed to experiment, path dependences in established industry and competition from novel smaller scale solutions based on local production, energy storage and smart grid technology. Other barriers originate in the organisational and institutional complexities of international electricity trade, and in the lack of trust at local and global levels, which hinder the development of necessary coordination.
Conclusions The analysis suggests that if the Super-grid is to become part of a future electricity system, the discourse needs to open up, move beyond simplistic ideas of efficiency and 'technocratic internationalism', and take into account a broader set of social benefits, risks and trade-offs.

Super-grid

High-voltage transmission

Technological innovation system

Energy transition

Author

Kristina Hojcková

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Helene Ahlborg

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Björn Sandén

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Energy, Sustainability and Society

2192-0567 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 1 42

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Social Sciences Interdisciplinary

History of Technology

Energy Systems

Areas of Advance

Energy

DOI

10.1186/s13705-022-00368-y

More information

Latest update

10/25/2023