« Another weekend, another weekend of negative wholesale #power prices this time across most of #Europe. Basically from 11.00-17.00 today most countries from #France to #Finland will have power prices of zero or below. » #RePowerEU
https://twitter.com/gerardreid14/status/1662356280042766336
Gerard Reid on Twitter

“Another weekend, another weekend of negative wholesale #power prices this time across most of #Europe. Basically from 11.00-17.00 today most countries from #France to #Finland will have power prices of zero or below.”

Twitter
« It’s an increasingly common phenomenon as Europe races to build more cheap solar farms to cut demand for fossil fuels. Intraday prices in Germany, the region’s biggest power market, turned negative from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Tuesday, according to data from Epex Spot SE. » https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-07-04/power-prices-drop-below-zero-as-solar-output-surges-in-europe
European Power Prices Go Below Zero Again as Solar Output Surges

European power prices fell below zero again as production from solar farms overwhelms the grid early in the afternoon.

Bloomberg
Interesting post from Siemens Energy on their off-shore wind Power-To-X experiments and the various deployment models. https://spectrum.ieee.org/green-hydrogen-2663997448
Wind-to-Hydrogen Tech Goes to Sea

Siemens Energy is leading a coalition of 32 organizations, called H2Mare, which is developing the technology to produce green hydrogen out at sea

IEEE Spectrum

☀️⚡️ Everyone in Switzerland agrees we need more solar. But often, there's disagreement about where to put the panels without impacting the landscapes too much.

🛤️ Looking back, this one is a no-brainer, why not lay them down between train rails: there's already a strong connection to the grid, and it's infrastructure that's already ‘built’.

🇨🇭 First segment of the tracks got inaugurated today in canton Neuchâtel.

https://www.rts.ch/info/regions/neuchatel/2025/article/la-premiere-centrale-solaire-sur-rails-a-ete-inauguree-dans-le-canton-de-neuchatel-28863275.html
Supplier: https://www.sun-ways.ch

#Solar #Trains #Railways

La première centrale solaire sur rails a été inaugurée dans le canton de Neuchâtel

C'est un projet inédit en Suisse: la première centrale solaire amovible sur une voie ferrée ouverte au trafic ferroviaire a été inaugurée jeudi à Buttes, dans le canton de Neuchâtel. Des trains voyageurs vont donc circuler par-dessus une installation photovoltaïque.

Radio Télévision Suisse
@fj As with any of the countles and infamous "solar roadways" projects the numbers and specific technical challenges make it not feasible. Would be nice if it where not so.

@micron
This one at least has the advantage that you don't need the same surface to provide both electricity and grip.

Either way, a tiny distraction in the big picture. Put solar in the fields, grow a screen of trees around, done.
@fj

×
@ives are you talking about a different Belgium to the one i am looking at because this one i could cover 90% in solar panels without a single person having to move
@bovine3dom 20% of what you're seeing is forest, and another 20% is buildings. Unless you're going to use rooftops and cut down all trees, I don't think you'll reach 90%.

@ives yeah, fair enough, sorry. i could only cover 80% of it in solar panels without a single person having to move. i had underestimated just how dense Belgium is - it is about 20% populated as you said.

I'm not keen on cutting down any forests so let's only cover 50% of Belgium in solar panels

that's 15,000km² which would be about 1,500GW - double the current total world capacity of solar

i really don't understand in what way you "don't have space" :)

@bovine3dom @ives In most provinces of Belgium, the majority of the agricultural land goes livestock grazing, an utterly wasteful activity. It can be eliminated without any impact on food security (since meat and dairy are useless) or income (since it's all loss-making subsidised business). (But it doesn't even need to be, as you can let sheep graze around the solar panels.) The average livestock grazing farm is 40 ha. How many landowners do you need to convert to solar?
https://www.atlas-belgique.be/index.php/en/digital-atlas/agriculture/
Landscape, rural areas and agriculture – Atlas of Belgium

@nemobis @bovine3dom @ives

It seems to me that livestock grazing is not incompatible with solar panels.

Solar farm trial shows improved fleece on merino sheep grazed under panels

Two farmers running merinos on solar farms in NSW's Central West say their sheep thrive under solar panels, while wool quality has increased.

ABC News

@resuna @nemobis @bovine3dom @ives More solar panels and a little less livestock would be the ideal combination.

The cows do however love the shade the solar panels provide.

@bovine3dom It's not a matter of space. Belgium doesn't want any more solar capacity because our grid is shit, our grid operators are grifters, and people are going to have to pay to inject the excess production from their rooftop PV.

@bovine3dom Built infrastructure is already claimed land.

30% of urban space is streets or car parks. Either of those can be claimed relatively easily.

Large construction, especially warehouses, are very easy to deck with solar, and contribute usefully to reducing summer cooling loads. Probably winter as well.

Plants "eat" sunlight, and solar vs. agriculture is inherently rivalrous. Much of Europe is constrained for food production already, and farmland, particularly in the Netherlands is some of the most productive in the world, both in kg/hectare and €/hectare bases.

13% of the Netherlands is built-up area, either buildings or roads. Assuming full utilisation (a stretch) that's on the order of 500 GWe capacity. Roughly 250 large nuclear power stations.

In practice, likely much less of that could be effectively developed, but even 10% would be a substantial generating capacity.

And with no claims on farm, forest, or natural areas.

Another option would be floating solar, which has been proposed elsewhere. Near-offshore, sheltered from waves/storms, could also be substantial.

@ives

@dredmorbius i think the crux of my disagreement is that you're assuming that farm land is land used efficiently. In the Netherlands for vegetables it is, but in many other countries it is used extremely inefficiently and animal farming inherently uses loads of space for very little food

not to mention the huge benefits to nature of rewilding these ecological deserts while you add solar, which you don't get from urban solar

@bovine3dom Well, to the credit of my argument, we are in fact discussing the Netherelands.

Or Switzerland, also not particularly abundant in farmland.

There are crops which benefit from shading. However, again, plants literally eat sunlight, and if you're taking from insolation you will, all else being equal, be reducing the agricultural potential.

(All is not of course always equal, but that would also suggest that the crop being grown isn't ideally suited to the land in question.)

If you're looking at solar siting, again, built environment gives ready wins, as does placement on/near linear infrastructure (rail lines, aqueducts, highways). Or in non-arable land, particularly deserts, of which there are few in Europe proper, but large extants within the proximate region.

Again, Europe is agriculturally constrained, and will continue to be barring either sharp reductions in population or frankly unlikely improvements in per-hectare output in a crude caloric and nutritional basis.

Rooftop space doesn't suffer from these constraints, is reasonably abundant, and is proximate to other essential infrastructure (electrical transmission, substations, end-use, etc., etc.).

@dredmorbius we were talking about Switzerland and Belgium, unless you have some very controversial opinions about Flanders :)

the idea that Europe is agriculturally constrained is new to me. do you have any data on that? my understanding is that there is a huge productivity gap with the Netherlands and US due to politics rather than geography.

My humble opinion is that Switzerland should have approximately zero farms and import everything from the Po valley but I understand some disagree

@dredmorbius i was curious enough on yields to look myself and there's a lot of room for improvement, especially in eastern europe https://ourworldindata.org/crop-yields#explore-data-on-crop-yields
Crop Yields

Increasing crop yields is crucial to improve food security, living standards, and reduce human impacts on the environment.

Our World in Data

@bovine3dom Europe being ag-constrained is pretty well-known. It's driven by a number of factors, including population density, extant land-use, economic factors (high labour costs tend to push out low-profit but diet-critical crops such as bulk grains (wheat, maize, rice, barley, oats) in favour of high-profit luxury crops (flowers, table crops, wine grapes, etc.).

From your subsequent toot, the fact that the Netherlands has little viable crop-yield potential actually restates this: farm yields are already near or at their optimum values given current technology and practices. I'll take as given that Eastern European yields could be increased, but that's also fairly predictable given weaker economies and purchasing power (hence: less-capable mechnisation and reduced / non-optimal fertiliser and pesticide use). A non-EU example would be Sri Lanka whose economic collapse has lead to a curtailment of ag-input imports (fertilisers, pesticides, mechanisation goods and maintenance), and a corresponding productivity collapse in a country that's already food-perilous.

Look to EU farm imports debates for the significance of this debate. Key source countries for imports include the US, Brazil, Agentina (both are major beef exporters), Ukraine, and India.

For per-nation breakouts see: https://wits.worldbank.org/CountryProfile/en/Country/EUN/Year/2021/TradeFlow/Import/Partner/by-country/Product/16-24_FoodProd

General policy:

The European Union is a major importer of food and feed...

https://food.ec.europa.eu/horizontal-topics/official-controls-and-enforcement/imported-products_en

(This focuses more on quality than quantity, but establishes significance.)

UK (noting not EU proper, but similar characteristics):

The UK continues to source food from domestic production and trade at around an overall 60:40 ratio.... The production-to-supply ratio was at 62% for all food and 75% for indigenous foods (meaning those that can be grown in the UK) in 2023, showing a small increase from 61% and 74% in 2021.

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/united-kingdom-food-security-report-2024/united-kingdom-food-security-report-2024-theme-2-uk-food-supply-sources

European Union Food Products Imports by country 2021 | WITS Data

Merchandise trade and tariff data for European Union (EUN) Food Products import from all countries (trading partner) including Trade Value, Product Share, MFN and Effectively applied tariffs, count of duty free and dutiable products for 2021

@dredmorbius i agree that NL is near max food production (unless it moved some animal to vegetable production). i am also well aware that the UK has not been self sufficient in food for around three hundred years. which does mean i think it would be daft to try to be self sufficient now.

electricity is hard to transport over long distances, food is easy to transport. so let's do the easy stuff?

i also don't think that the fact that we have imports precludes increasing productivity.

@bovine3dom Electricity is remarkably easy to transmit long distances. HVAC and HVDC transmission losses are ~6% or so. Most of the T&D losses (transmission and distribution) are actually the Carnot losses of thermal -> generator losses (about 40--60%). There is some transformer / inverter loss, but transmission is on balance pretty cheap. Since long-distance transmission follows few paths and fairly straight lines, there's also remarkably little required infrastructure relative to benefit.

https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=105&t=3

The challenge for, say, a NorAfrican solar plant servicing Europe would be trans-Mediterranean links. Those remain viable, however, with either a Gibraltar or MidEast route being most likely. (Political and military stability of the latter are the greatest concern, not technical viability.) If solar -> synfuel is opted for (far less efficient, but far more storable), transport and distribution is virtually identical to current petroleum-based hydrocarbons, and could rely on extant plant (ships, pipelines, terminals, storage & distribution).

Several IPCC reports specifically explore decarbonisation pathways. Vaclav Smil's books on energy transition are also strongly recommended.

Regards food: imports work fine so long as global trade and political systems support it. That picture is darkening markedly, and relying on very long supply chains presents risks and challenges. The extent to which local capacity can be sustained, it's likely beneficial to do so. The same argument applies to energy imports, but solar imports (electricity, synfuel) are fairly fungible, and EU comparative advantage is in food production rather than energy.

That's arguable, of course, but in general I suspect the balance of advantage is to grow food comparable to current levels, and import renewables. Remember too that built-environment solar remains a viable option, and one that doesn't compete with food as I hope I've detailed sufficiently.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)

Energy Information Administration - EIA - Official Energy Statistics from the U.S. Government

@dredmorbius i think we are broadly in agreement. i think the EU could do fine with a few percent fewer farms and that switching them to solar would be quicker than trying to build HVDC under the sea.

we should do that too and stick a rail tunnel there while we're at it

going all the way back to what started this argument i essentially want us to make it legal for farmers to switch to solar if they want. and for us not to put stupid taxes on solar panels because the wrong foreigner made them

@bovine3dom Most Western European farmland is highly-optimised. That would include FR, NL, DE, CH, DK, and probably ES, IT. Nordic countries are effectively fucked for domestic grains production, though they do well for fisheries.

The sustainable energy situation is extrordinarily technical and complex. For an excellent national-level assessment that's appropriate for most of the EU, though it's based on the UK, see the late David MacKay's Sustainable Energy --- Without the hot air. One of his key points is that every BIG bit helps --- small measures such as unplugging personal electronics and televisions are utterly specious. Indigenous energy sufficiency in the UK would require vast renewables infrastructure and tremendous efficiency improvements and net energy curtailments.

Renewables-based imports (e.g., long-distance power transmission from the Sahara, synfuels, or imports of energy-intensive goods) are all but certain to be part of such a mix.

Again: absent marginal intances, ag+solar is a nonstarter. Urban/built infrastructure, floating deployments, and imports are far more sane. To the point this isn't worth discussing. I strongly recommend your reading MacKay.

#DavidMacKay #SustainableEnergyWithoutTheHotAir