State-owned utility and power generator HSE is targeting 800MW of flexibility assets across Slovenia by 2035, including pumped hydro energy storage (PHES) and battery energy storage systems (BESS).
How much energy does Slovenia need?
Slovenia targets 400 MW in BESS, 100 MW in electrolyzers and more pumped storage in the updated Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan.
How many battery energy storage systems are there in Slovenia?
The battery energy storage systems are divided into two 5 MW units installed in Slovenia in the existing 110/35 kV Pekre and 400/110 kV Okroglo substations. They have a total active power of 10 MW and a nominal capacity of 50 MWh, ranking these BESS installations among the largest installed in Europe.
Another pumped storage hydropower plant is seen by 2045. It would be able to generate 180 MW and store 2.6 GWh. The Integrated National Energy and Climate Plan envisages an overall 500 MW in gas power plants in Slovenia by the end of the decade.
How many solar power plants are there in Slovenia?
The review shows there are currently at least 58 locations on the territory of Slovenia where it is possible to set up utility-scale solar power plants with a capacity higher than 10 MW, and connect them to the transmission grid. ELES estimated the total technical potential for connecting solar power plants at 1.031 MW, the statement adds
The rest of energy storage includes battery energy storage systems (BESS) of 400 MW in total capability. As for pumped storage hydropower plants, the plan is to add 440 MW by 2030 in both advanced scenarios. One is based on acceleration in renewables and the other on more nuclear energy. The capacity matches the Kozjak project.
Can Slovenia add 1 GW of solar power by 2025?
It is technically possible to add 1,826 MW in total. The review of the capacity of Slovenia's grid to include utility-scale solar power plants is primarily intended for investors, and it represents a tool to achieve the government's goal to add 1 GW of solar by 2025. It is also a part of the cabinet's wider push to increase the use of renewables.