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     power system, the ENTSO-E system, which represents 35 countries, on the day before Russia’s invasion began. The two grids were synchronised in record short time. Initially, Ukraine exported electricity to the EU, but since has become a net importer of electricity. However, the export potential of Europe to Ukraine is limited.
“Export capacities from the EU to Ukraine are currently set at 1.7 GW with a total of up to 2.4GW. There are several options to increase these capacities ahead of next winter,” says Georg Zachmann, a senior fellow at the Bruegel think tank. “A strong increase by 1 GW could substantially reduce the need for power-cuts in Ukraine.” However, to make the increases Zachmann say several things can be done in preparation. He networks in Hungary and Romania can be improved to increase export capacity to the maximum.
The ENTSO-E reserve should also be increased from 3GW to 5GW to allow for greater transfers to Ukraine and a new Mukachea-Kapuszany 400kV transmission line needs to be completed that will allow more power transfers, while the deadline for another Pivdneukransk power transmission line with Romania needs to be brought forward to 2026 from 2028.
A new substation in Hungary would increase the cross-border transmission capacity that currently has a bottleneck and install new power generation on the Polish side of the Zamosc-Dobrotvir line of the border to act as any additional reserve. There are also a substantial number of 110kV lines with Poland that could be upgraded, Bruegel suggests.
And finally, Bruegel says a new factory to produce spares and equipment should be built in the EU near to the Ukrainian border to facilitate faster repairs to Ukraine’s power infrastructure.
“Assuming an additional transmission capacity of 0.5GW from Poland, load shedding can be reduced by 800 hours, and the total number of load shedding hours comes down to 46%, compared to 55% in the “limited repairs” scenario,” Bruegel said in a report. “This amount of new capacity supports the Ukrainian system but is insufficient to fully address the deficit.” Ukraine will be able to import 12TWh in the limited repairs scenario, but Bruegel says this can be increased to a maximum of 13.8TWh if its recommendations are implemented and action taken over the summer. In this case Ukraine will be able to meet domestic demand in the hours of low demand, but in the hours of high demand imports will only partly contribute to the reduction of “load shedding”, a way to distribute demand for electrical power across multiple power sources, used to relieve stress on a primary energy source when demand for electricity is greater than the primary power source can supply.
 2.5 Ukraine's power sector close to “worst case” scenario
    The destruction inflicted on Ukraine’s power infrastructure has left it close to the “worst case scenario” , the Executive Director Dmytro Sakharuk of Ukraine’s biggest privately-owned utility DTEK told the Kyiv Independent in an interview.
Ukrainians could face up to 20 hours of daily blackouts this winter if the country fails to repair and protect its energy infrastructure from Russian attacks, Sakharuk said.
 12 UKRAINE Country Report July 2024 www.intellinews.com
 
























































































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