The United States is facing a critical imbalance between supply and demand for power transformers, essential devices in the nation's power grid. These transformers, unlike the shape-shifting robots of fiction, play a crucial role in managing the flow of electricity from transmission lines to consumers, akin to a traffic cop regulating vehicles on a road.
Killian McKenna, a researcher at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), emphasized the significance of distribution transformers, describing them as a cornerstone of the country's energy infrastructure. However, utilities are grappling with high prices and long wait times for these transformers due to supply chain shortages, posing potential threats to energy accessibility, reliability, and affordability.
To tackle this challenge, McKenna and his team at NREL are leading an initiative funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to quantify the long-term demand for distribution transformers. The endeavor involves analyzing various factors such as load growth from building and transportation electrification, extreme weather events, and the need to modernize aging electrical infrastructure.
NREL's study, which marks the first phase completion, focuses on assessing the current stock of transformers in terms of number, capacity, age, and usage—a task never undertaken before. Based on the collected data, it's estimated that distribution transformer capacity may need to increase significantly by 2050 to meet the escalating energy demands across residential, commercial, industrial, and transportation sectors.
Moreover, the analysis highlights the increasing demand for step-up transformers necessary for integrating renewable energy sources like wind and solar into the power grid efficiently. The DOE has tasked NREL with developing additional analysis capabilities to forecast future transformer demand accurately, with a focus on informing distribution planning decisions and facilitating collaborative discussions among stakeholders in the power sector. Read the full paper here.
Source: nrel.gov