Spain’s Data Centers Absorb Renewables to Workar
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Data centers in Spain are absorbing excess green energy capacity due to grid saturation that has left the country’s electrical nodes unable to admit new renewable energy demand. It is a common problem among economies that have made major investments in green energy production without making sufficient upgrades to their electrical grids.
As solar, wind, and other renewable energy sources generate more clean energy than their grids can reasonably admit, connection bottlenecks form and green energy projects have to wait months or even years before they can sell their clean energy.
Spain is avoiding this eventuality by using data centers to absorb this ‘excess’ capacity. The European nation is one of the world’s largest green energy producers in terms of capacity and sourced a record 56.8% of its energy from renewables such as wind, hydropower, and solar in 2024.
However, Spain’s grid has become saturated with energy, leaving renewable energy projects across the country holding gigawatts of clean energy that simply can’t be connected to the national grid.
These developers have responded to the grid saturation by directing their untapped capacity to the data center segment, a swiftly growing and energy-intensive industry that is in desperate need for clean energy.
Additionally, energy storage facilities have also been tapped to store unused clean energy capacity. Energy storage is an essential component of the green transition, largely due to the intermittent nature of clean energy production, but this time Spanish green energy developers are using storage as a workaround to grid saturation.
According to October data from Red Eléctrica de España, close to 85% of the country’s distribution and transmission nodes do not have the capacity to admit new electricity demand, putting immense strain on Spain’s energy grid. The country’s Northern and Central regions, which produce a notable portion of its renewable capacity, are particularly affected by the grid saturation impacting the country. The saturation is so intense that it could potentially impact storage, green hydrogen, and industrial projects in the regions.
Consequently, OSPRE Energy Director González-Onieva Johansson says, developers are repurposing their solar energy assets into hybrid projects that feature data centers to soak up the excess capacity and prevent energy waste. This is largely thanks to Spanish regulations that allow developers to allocate up to 50% of their energy generation to self-consumption. The executive notes that developers adopted this strategy due to a fall in wholesale green energy prices and limited connection capacity in the country, particularly in regions like Northern and Central Spain that generate the bulk of the country’s renewable capacity.
As energy generation firms sell their excess power to data center operators, a lasting solution to grid connections could eventually be found and owners of new energy vehicles made by firms like Bollinger Innovations, Inc. (OTC: BINI) may eventually start entirely charging their vehicles using renewable energy that gets onto the grid.
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