Electricity

Heat pumps, electric cars expected to contribute little to power demand growth in Greece

Heat pumps and electric cars expected to bring small rise in power demand for Greece

Photo: freepik.com

Published

July 10, 2024

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

July 10, 2024

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Contrary to earlier estimates, heat pumps and electric cars are not expected to significantly raise electricity demand in Greece.

Heat pumps and electric cars, along with other new green technologies, are the cornerstones of the European Green Deal and the REPowerEU plan. They electrify transportation and heating and cooling on the path to achieving the net zero emissions goal.

The Hellenic Electricity Distribution Operator (HEDNO) recently published its scenarios for the years up to 2030 concerning demand in the distribution network.

The grid is ready to accommodate any number of electric cars

HEDNO examined four scenarios:

1. Electric cars reach 30% of total car sales by 2030, which is the government’s stated goal based on the National Energy and Climate Plan (NECP);

2. An extreme path with electric cars reaching 90% by 2030 if the European Union decides to phase out internal combustion engines;

3. Scenario 1, together with large projects, based on applications by large network users and including new demand from harbors, hospitals, industries, airports etc;

4. Scenario 2, together with large capacity applications currently under consideration.

Demand for each scenario for the years between 2024 and 2030, in terawatt-hours (HEDNO), Greece
Demand for each scenario for the years between 2024 and 2030, in terawatt-hours (HEDNO), Greece

It should be noted that for electric cars, HEDNO calculated an average consumption of 20 kWh per 100 kilometers. Last year, the operator’s CEO, Anastasios Manos, said the grid is ready to accommodate any number of electric cars, even supporting a 90% penetration goal.

Electrification of heating already underway even without heat pumps

When it comes to heat pumps, HEDNO estimates their additional demand to be 0.2 TWh per year. It based the assumption on the national plan to upgrade 438,000 houses and 170,000 commercial buildings of the services sector by 2030.

HEDNO further highlights there are already times of high demand when electricity substitutes other forms of heating in buildings through the use of air conditioning. It means heat pumps will likely bring a smaller rise in demand than originally thought. Similarly, in large commercial buildings, heat pumps are expected to substitute not just heating systems that are based on fossil fuels, but also central air conditioning units that already use electricity.

Based on all of the above, we can exclude scenario 2, as it seems the European Union and Greece would postpone the proposed phaseout of internal combustion engines. What is left for electric cars is scenario 1, where the rise of demand is smaller than 3 TWh in a six-year span. Even if we add the 0.2 TWh per year from heat pumps, the rise is rather small.

On the other hand, the bulk of new demand is seen coming from new user connections and large user applications that HEDNO says it would try to accommodate in its network.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

eu western balkans cbam electricity market amendments

EU’s amendments to CBAM: possibility of relief, but January 1 brought market uncertainty

06 January 2026 - Long-awaited implementing acts and amendments to the CBAM Regulation brought only a minor relief for...

After adding PV unit Slovenian gas power plant TEB battery project

After adding PV unit, Slovenian gas power plant TEB launches battery project

06 January 2026 - The management of the Brestanica gas power plant has decided to diversify its activities further with a battery energy storage system

D Trading offtake 200 MW solar PPA with Econergy Romania

D.Trading to offtake 200 MW of solar in PPA with Econergy in Romania

06 January 2026 - DTEK Group's D.Trading signed an offtake deal with Econergy for 200 MW of solar power in Romania, including the country's largest PV plant

montenegro TSO cges investments ranko redzic

Montenegro’s TSO CGES to invest EUR 200 million

05 January 2026 - Montenegrin TSO CGES plans to invest EUR 200 million, according to Ranko Redžić, manager of the company's national dispatching center