World’s largest electric cable close to power, could light 1.4 million homes | A high voltage direct current cable will connect UK homes with fresh green energy from the wind farms of Denmark. (interestingengineering.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 20 Dec 2023 02:00
https://lemmy.world/post/9773151

World’s largest electric cable close to power, could light 1.4 million homes | A high voltage direct current cable will connect UK homes with fresh green energy from the wind farms of Denmark.::undefined

#technology

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originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com on 20 Dec 2023 02:09 next collapse

but will it kill a great white shark that keeps pestering the local kids? i need to know

shartedchocolate@lemmy.world on 20 Dec 2023 06:05 next collapse

Fresh green energy, straight from the orchard

tsonfeir@lemm.ee on 20 Dec 2023 14:16 collapse

It makes me want it more. That really should be the marketing for renewable energy. Everyone likes “fresh”

… especially republican men.

bratosch@lemm.ee on 20 Dec 2023 06:37 collapse

It’s gonna push DC from DK to UK? Seems ineffective?

Rentlar@lemmy.ca on 20 Dec 2023 07:17 collapse

Why do you think so? HVDC cables are not unusual nowadays, and in fact excel both in economic and technical terms over long distance.

electricaldeck.com/…/comparison-between-hvdc-and-…

This cable length is 765km, but in the Canadian province of Manitoba we have a 900 km transmission line built 50 years ago and still running strong for the most part.

bratosch@lemm.ee on 20 Dec 2023 09:24 collapse

Huh. I’ve just always heard that AC is the better way for long distances. TIL

jlh@lemmy.jlh.name on 20 Dec 2023 10:20 collapse

AC is typically used for power grids because it’s very easy to change voltage with a transformer. You can have 100-200V in households, and use a cheap transformer to step up the voltage to 100+kV to reduce resistive losses for long distances.

AC works well, but there are technically some downsides with AC, like the skin effect and parasitic capacitance. With modern technology, it’s pretty easy to step up/down DC voltage, and by using it for the biggest, longest power lines, you see some nice power savings for the effort. It’s called “HVDC”.