News

Project Migrate works on Europe’s future power grid

Published

January 29, 2016

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

January 29, 2016

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Elektro-Slovenija d.o.o. (ELES) said it came together with 12 other electricity transmission companies and 12 more universities and research institutions from 13 European countries in a consortium for the Migrate project. The name is derived from the research topic: ‘Massive Integration of Power Electronic Devices”, and the kick-off meeting was held in Brussels on January 20. The aim is to devise various approaches to technical issues relating to grid stability, supply quality, and control and security of supply that arise owing to the challenge posed by the ever-increasing use of renewable energy feed-in sources, the statement adds. The project, which is designed to run for four years, is receiving funding of roughly EUR 17 million from the European Union, and it forms part of the Horizon 2020 framework programme for research and innovation.

“The question that has to be examined is: how much power electronics can the grid cope with?”, said Mariana Stantcheva, project officer in European Commission’s Innovation and Networks Executive Agency (INEA). The integrated network will at certain points face challenges at various locations due to the large amounts of electricity fed into it from wind and solar sources. Both electricity production on the one hand – due to the increasing share of renewable energy – but also consumption on the other hand – owing to the implementation of energy efficiency systems, for example – will increasingly be linked to the electricity grid through power electronics, according to the report. A power station generator, for instance, lacks the inertia that is needed to guarantee the necessary frequency stability at 50 Hertz.

In December, the government in Ljubljana backed the implementation of a Slovenian–Japanese demonstration project, estimated at EUR 80 million, for testing technologies and solutions in working smart networks.

Related Articles

montenegro epcg bojan djordan bulatovic CEO

Montenegro’s EPCG appoints Bojan Đordan as acting CEO

21 October 2025 - Bojan Đordan is assuming the top position in EPCG after leading the state-owned utility's sector for renewable energy sources

serbia natural gas balkan stream russia bulgaria transit sanctions

Serbia warns of gas crisis as EU transit ban threatens Balkan Stream supply

21 October 2025 - Serbia is in a very difficult situation because, as of January 1, 2026, it won’t be able to receive Russian natural gas via Bulgaria, according to the Ministry of Mining and Energy

SANY International large PV BESS project southwestern Romania

SANY International takes over large PV-BESS project in southwestern Romania

21 October 2025 - Sany International (Singapore) acquired a project for a solar power plant of 95 MW in peak capacity combined with 218 MWh in battery storage

serbia electric vehicles filip mitrovic

Number of electric vehicles in Serbia reaches 6,000

20 October 2025 - The fleet of 6,000 electric vehicles (EVs) in Serbia is small compared to Europe, Filip Mitrović stressed