February 8 NEC Energy News

¶ “Solar Accounts For 81.5% Of New Electricity Sources Added To US Grid In 2024” • Over 90% of new generating capacity added in the US in 2024 was renewable. Of all new capacity, solar came first, with 30,816 MW, and wind was second, with 3,128 MW. In third place, natural gas added 2,428 MW, and nuclear was fourth, with 1,100 MW. [Solar Power World]

Solar farm (Raphael Cruz, Unsplash)

¶ “Grossi Says Zaporizhzhia Safety Talks ‘More Critical Than Ever'” • IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi held talks on safety and security issues for the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant with Rosatom’s Director General in Moscow. He said, “After three years of talks on ZNPP nuclear safety and security, these are more critical than ever.” [World Nuclear News]

¶ “RWE Offshore Wind Farm ‘To Help Balance German Grid'” • RWE has set out plans to help balance the German power grid via its 302-MW offshore wind farm, Amrumbank West. RWE plans to offer an automatic frequency restoration reserve. The transmission system operator TenneT granted the necessary pre-qualification for a capacity of 60 MW. [reNews]

¶ “USA Surpasses 50 Gigawatts Of Solar Module Manufacturing Capacity” • The US reached a historic manufacturing milestone, with 50 GW of domestic solar module production capacity. At full capacity, US factories can produce enough solar to meet all of its demand. This is a critical step toward building a US-based solar supply chain. [CleanTechnica]

Qcells Solar Factory In Georgia (Qcells image)

¶ “Global Cost Of Renewables To Continue Falling” • A report by BloombergNEF says new wind and solar farms are undercutting new coal and gas plants on production cost already in almost every market globally. Trade barriers could temporarily stall cost declines, but BNEF still expects the levelized cost of electricity for clean technologies to fall 22-49% by 2035. [reNews]

¶ “Enel Switches On Hybrid Solar-BESS In Texas” • Enel North America has switched on a hybrid solar and energy storage plant in Texas. The project, Estonian Solar, combines a 202-MW PV facility with a 104-MW Battery Energy Storage System. Enel has the plant in operation. It has power purchase agreements with BXP and Capri Holdings. [reNews]

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