Wind energy – green electricity
Eneco, CertiQ and FlexiDAO will be carrying out tests with time-based green electricity in the Netherlands for the first time.
The pilot project involves a digital link between Princess Amalia Wind Farm and an electrode boiler connected to The Hague’s Ypenburg district heating network. Production and consumption of green electricity will be measured and certified every hour and quarter of an hour.
Although the current certification system, which uses Guarantees of Origin (GoOs), works adequately, it does not support time-based certification. Currently, a GoO lists the start and end dates of production. Using a time indication, however, a guarantee can be given that green electricity is produced and also consumed within a single hour – or even within a quarter of an hour.
This is more in line with an energy system in which the balance between consumption and generation is becoming increasingly important as weather-dependent solar and wind power production increase. The link between Princess Amalia Wind Farm and the electrode boiler in Ypenburg enables testing of the measurements, procedures and software required to provide time-based certification in the future.
A more transparent certification system gives private customers and companies more accurate insight into the sustainability of their electricity consumption. It allows them to make better-informed choices regarding which electricity they want to use, and companies can make their sustainability ambitions even more explicit.
In this pilot project Eneco, CertiQ and FlexiDAO are investigating how data related to electricity production and consumption from different systems can be combined. They are also looking at how time-based green power certification can be integrated into the existing legal system of GoOs.
The project is one of six global projects testing the possibilities of time-based green power. This is part of EnergyTag: an energy industry initiative in which over 100 companies, governments and NGOs work together to create a more transparent certification system that better reflects the increase in the supply of weather-dependent solar and wind power. The goal is to accelerate the energy transition by offering certifiable green energy 24/7.