Siemens AG  has produced the first part of a study of European and world generation patterns which concludes that building and expanding renewable energy installations in the wrong locations is costing €45 billion in unnecessary investment and claims that potential savings, on a scale 4-5 times the annual investment in solar and wind power plant construction in Germany, are possible.

Siemens carried out the analysis as part of an ongoing study that it intends to present in detail to what it considers the world’s most important energy gathering, the World Energy Congress, to be held next in Daegu, South Korea in October 2013.
The company has analysed the electrical power producing systems across Europe and identified considerable potential for optimisation, especially in connection with plans to expand power generation from renewable energy sources. The crux lies in the choice of location: If installations were built at the sites in Europe that offered the highest power yields, some € 45 billion of investment in renewables could be saved by 2030. This figure includes the associated extension of the power grid. As a comparison, around € 10 billion were invested in new solar and wind power generating installations in Germany in 2012. "In Europe, just the new photovoltaic capacity alone to be built by 2030 amounts to about 138 gigawatts. If these facilities were erected at the sunniest sites, we could save 39 gigawatts of solar equipment – for the same power yield. The choice of site is crucial to the efficiency and economy of wind power, as well," notes Michael Su¨ß, a member of Siemens corporate executive committee and CEO of Siemens’ energy sector.
In carrying out the study, Siemens is working with the Technical University of Munich to examine energy systems worldwide with the aim of ascertaining their utilisation rate of resources, reliability of supply, sustainability and cost-efficiency. Based on the realisation that billions are being wasted every year as a result of inefficiencies in worldwide energy systems and markets, the study intends to precisely identify and quantify these losses, and to propose solutions.
Siemens has spotlighted four main levers that it believes can optimise energy systems worldwide. They can be more or less effective depending on the regional characteristics of the power grids and the power plant fleet.
1. Local optimization of renewable power installations: This means exploiting regional power generation potentials to the full, and involves finding the best sites for solar installations, hydropower storage facilities and wind power farms, and expanding the grids to match.
2. Enhancing the efficiency of the power system as a whole: for instance, the average efficiency of coal-fired power plants in Europe is only 38 %, whereas modern plants can reach up to 46 %. Installing more efficient electrical equipment in industry and households would cut CO2 emissions and costs even further.
3. Improvements in the power plant mix: switching from coal fuel to gas-fired power plants would considerably reduce the volumes of CO2 emitted by conventional power generation. This alone implies an annual CO2 savings potential of 365 million tons in Europe. That is equivalent to half of all emissions in Germany.
4. More use of electric power for energy needs: instead of generating power locally at low efficiency and burning oil and natural gas to heat buildings, power could be generated more efficiently in large-scale power plants, and high-efficiency electrical heating systems could be used in thermally insulated houses – at least in regions with broad-scale power grid coverage.
Energy systems around the world vary broadly owing to their regional conditions, and are constantly changing. Norway, for instance, thanks to its favourable topology, can rely almost exclusively on hydropower. At the same time it is a major producer of natural gas, most of which it exports. But very little of its abundant hydropower is presently exported via long-distance transmission lines, despite the great demand for imbalance (i.e. balancing) energy in many countries of Europe.
Looking to the future, Great Britain and Germany have opted for large-scale use of renewable energy resources for their power systems. The UK intends to expand its
offshore wind power capacity to meet one quarter of its power demand by 2020, while in Germany wind power’s share is to rise to 15 % by 2030. Germany wants to generate 80 % of its power from renewable sources by 2050. Wide fluctuations in power generation due to changing weather conditions thus dictate that large-scale energy storage or high-capacity exchange arrangements with other countries be in place.
The United States is currently experiencing an unprecedented natural gas boom because the high-paced exploitation of non-conventional deposits is making local natural gas up to two-thirds cheaper than in Europe. Gas-fired power plants are thus set to play a major role in US power generation in the future. The US may even be on its way to changing from one of the biggest importers to one of the biggest exporters of fossil fuels. In Asia, by contrast, due to the already high and still growing demand for energy and because of the region’s strong dependence on imports, natural gas is currently about five times as expensive as in the U.S.
In its study, says Siemens, it is examining these regional difference, making allowances for predicted future developments, and identifying the implications for neighbouring energy markets. One of the aims is to determine what approaches are most suitable from national and global economic perspectives for creating reliable and sustainable energy systems with high efficiency but still at affordable power prices.
Further interim findings are to be presented and discussed on June 4 in Moscow, on July 9 in Juno Beach, Florida, on August 1 in Beijing and on September 4 in Abu Dhabi.