Green Power Denmark: Report underscores the need for biomass

The Danish Council on Climate Change’s latest report shows that regulatable capacity is of utmost importance for future supply, states Green Power Denmark.
Green Power Denmark holds that you ought to ensure economic incentives to invest in existing biomass-burning facilities and other regulatable production as well as flexible solutions and storage. | Photo: Thomas Borberg
Green Power Denmark holds that you ought to ensure economic incentives to invest in existing biomass-burning facilities and other regulatable production as well as flexible solutions and storage. | Photo: Thomas Borberg
by anne filbert, translated christian radich hoffman & daniel pedersen

Denmark’s electricity supply security could face greater challenges than previously assumed, the Danish Council on Climate Change concludes in a new report. This primarily owes to an increased focus on sustainable energy from wind and solar while the regulatable energy has been under less scrutiny.

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