Corporate Social Responsability (CSR)
EN

Sprache auswählen

  • DE
  • EN
Corporate Social Responsability (CSR)
EN
  • DE
  • EN
  • Sustainability Report
    Sustainability Report
    • Principles and strategy
      Principles and strategy
      • Principles
      • Business model
      • Shareholder structure
      • Values, principles, standards and code of conduct
      • Human rights
      • Materiality and objectives
      • Grid
    • Human resources
      Human resources
      • Approach to HR management
      • Work-life balance
      • Social dialogue and co-determination
      • Training
      • Remuneration policy
      • Equal opportunities
    • Occupational health and safety
      Occupational health and safety
      • Approach to occupational health and safety
      • Health and safety training
    • Society
      Society
      • Approach to stakeholder engagement
      • Community relations and public acceptance
      • Stakeholder dialogue
      • Cooperation and innovation
      • Community engagement
    • Environmental aspects
      Environmental aspects
      • Approach to environmental management
      • Nature conservation and biodiversity
      • Energy Consumption
      • Emissions
    • Economics
      Economics
      • Finance
      • Green bond
      • EU taxonomy
      • Local value creation
    • GRI

Sprache auswählen

  • DE
  • EN

Sustainability Report/Sustainability 2019/Principles and Strategy/Principles

Principles

Our vision

For a successful energy transition in a sustainable world

The energy transition will not just happen by itself. It is only possible if we actively work towards it. If we maintain a dialogue with all players involved to openly discuss challenges in grid expansion. If we offer a reliable infrastructure that reacts flexibly to fluctuations in supply and demand. And if we consider both customer and stakeholder perspectives in all our decisions. Then we can look forward to a successful energy transition for a sustainable world.

 

 

60 %

 

A 65 percent share of renewable energies in gross electricity consumption by 2030 - that is the target value agreed by the German government. What does that mean for 50Hertz? In 2019, we will have already safely integrated 60 percent* of renewable energies into the grid in northern and eastern Germany. We are working on new projects to make innovative technologies efficiently usable for this goal. We're making our grid and systems fit to meet the additional transmission requirements securely and in line with market and consumer requirements.

* Calculated share of renewable energies in electricity consumption in the 50Hertz grid area in 2019

Performance of production sources (energy mix) 

SDG7, GRI 302-2

Change in the share of renewable energy in electricity consumption

Energy import & export

GRI 102-6

Energy consumption

In the grid area of 50Hertz, electricity consumption is stable over the year at 99 TWh in 2019 (96.8 TWh in 2018 and 96 TWh in 2017 and 2016).

Grid reliability

GRI Sector disclosure EU12

50Hertz is a pioneer in the integration of renewable energies and simultaneously offers a high degree of supply security.

The context of the energy Transition

GRI Demand-Side-Management, Ensuring the availability and reliability of electricity

As transmission system operators, 50Hertz leads the way in the Energy transition. Our grid have a crucial role to play in the decarbonisation of the energy sector and society in general.

Decarbonisation of the energy sector

The decarbonisation of the energy sector based on increasing shares of renewables will remain the most important driver of change in Europe. This trend is propelled by the political objective to counter climate change and build a sustainable energy future, but is also supported by the rapid development and declining costs of renewable technologies themselves. We expect this trend to accelerate - with direct effects both on the required grid expansion and on system operation. The availability of different types of renewable energy at different locations contributes to the sustainability, resilience and stability of the European electricity system as a whole, and increasingly requires the transport of electricity flows over long distances and the interconnection of European electricity systems. In other words: We must be ready for the transmission of electricity over long distances and at the same time be able to cope with the sometimes extreme fluctuations, especially in electricity production.

Decentralisation

“Prosumer” numbers will rise and they will move to the forefront of the electricity system even more,
empowered by technologies that allow them to play a much more active role. New technologies,
increasing electrification and sector integration also stimulate the emergence of new players such as
service providers targeting end-consumers. For example, balancing service providers are exploring the
potential of delivering flexibility to different Players along the value chain.

Supranational coordination

The increasing share of renewables and the trend towards more decentralised generation with a
much larger number of players is making the behaviour of the power system more variable and
complex. In addition, all over Europe we are seeing grid development lag behind rapidly evolving
renewable generation. This is causing congestion problems and considerable redispatching costs in
some European countries. Given the already high degree of interconnectedness and integration of the
European power system and markets, responding to these challenges often requires a supranational
approach.

Digitalisation

The fourth trend, which is being introduced at a rapid pace, will accelerate the speed of the decarbonisation and the decentralisation of production. Elia Group expects to see massive amounts of
renewables coming online at all levels of the grid, electrification powering activities such as mobility
and heat & cooling, more international cooperation, and millions of people producing and storing their
own electricity. To respond to this, the Group believes that a new way of managing the future power
system is required in order to maximise the Benefits of the energy transition. This will be possible thanks to the digitalisation of the power system connecting all electrical devices and various players in the system. The emergence of new digital technologies will allow new capabilities for improving the gathering, transfer, processing, and visualisation of data, as well as the automation of decisions and actions in managing the power system. Some of these digital technologies include (but are not limited to) the Internet of Things, cloud computing, big data, artificial intelligence and blockchain.

"A stable and secure grid around the clock" Interview with Stefan Kapferer, CEO 50Hertz

A stable and secure grid around the clock

INTERVIEW WITH STEFAN KAPFERER, CEO 50HERTZ

How can 50Hertz support the ambitions of the European Green Deal?

— Stefan Kapferer: The strength of Elia Group lies in the variety of different market designs we have to deal with, different perspectives we can share and of course, the different cultures which we can learn from. The mere fact that our headquarters are located in Berlin and Brussels speaks for itself. No other TSO in Europe has this presence in two capitals. As far as 50Hertz operational contribution is concerned: no other TSO has such a large share of fluctuating electricity volumes from wind and solar power in its grid. In 2019, we had around 60% of our electricity consumption coming from renewables, which is one of the world’s highest shares. In our grid area, we expect to achieve the German federal government's 2030 target of 65% renewables within two years.


What are currently the biggest challenges?

— Stefan Kapferer: The German government has now decided on a clear timetable to phase out coal-fired power generation by 2038 at the latest and then to secure the electricity supply mainly through renewable energies and flexible gas power plants. This is an enormous task. So far no one can reliably say where all the electricity needed for private households, for industry and increasingly also for heating and transport sectors will come from. For us as a transmission system operator, this poses several major challenges.


Why is there a need for grid in times were generation becomes more decentralised?


— Stefan Kapferer: The energy transition will only be succesful if we all collaborate and use all the available potential. And we as TSOs and DSOs have a key role to play: it won't work without us. Incidentally, a scientific association recently recorded this with a clarity I wouldn’t have expected. ‘Without the grid expansion, the energy transition will fail,’ says the German scientific elite in a recently published paper. And that's why we deliver. 50Hertz has launched an investment programme of €4.2 billion for the next five years. It includes onshore projects such as the SuedOstLink and the Berlin cable diagonal, as well as the important offshore grid connections Ostwind 2 & 3 and the HansaPower Bridge interconnector to Sweden. Offshore will become increasingly important because wind turbines at sea have higher fullload hours and are perceived by the public as less disruptive. This investment programme naturally also requires an adequate and responsible regulatory Framework.


What else is needed to make this huge task a success?


— Stefan Kapferer: Grid expansion alone is not enough. We urgently need innovations in hardware - from cables to substations - and also in software, in other words in the markets. Before we build a new line, we need to better utilise and optimise the existing grid. We are doing this using the latest technology, but there is still a lot of research and field testing to be done. And in times of nuclear and coal phase-out, we need new equipment such as phase shifters, reactive power compensation systems and intelligent data management. The topic of ‘energy storage’ will also gain momentum, both in the smart home context and at the Power-to-X level - I am convinced of that. Intensive, trusting cooperation between grid operators at various levels and large industrial electricity consumers is essential.

  • Contact
  • Imprint
  • Data Protection
  • Newsletter
  • Sitemap
  • per E-Mail teilen auf Facebook teilen auf X teilen
Login