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This mismatch between supply and demand necessitates effective energy storage solutions. While batteries have been the traditional method, flywheel energy storage systems (FESS) are emerging as an innovative and potentially superior alternative, particularly in applications like time-shifting solar power.
Flywheel energy storage is mostly used in hybrid systems that complement solar and wind energy by enhancing their stability and balancing the grid frequency because of their quicker response times or with high-energy density storage solutions like Li-ion batteries .
VYCON’s VDC® flywheel energy storage solutions significantly improve critical system uptime and eliminates the environmental hazards, costs and continual maintenance associated with lead-acid based batteries
While many papers compare different ESS technologies, only a few research [152,153] studies design and control flywheel-based hybrid energy storage systems. Recently, Zhang et al. present a hybrid energy storage system based on compressed air energy storage and FESS.
Germany achieved a record share of wind and solar in its electricity mix over the first nine months of 2024, exceeding fossil fuels for the first time. New solar capacity additions in the first nine months of 2024 show that Germany is continuing the record pace set in 2023.
With more than 28,000 turbines and a cumulative capacity of 63 gigawatts (GW) in operation across the country, Germany boasted the largest installed onshore wind fleet in Europe and the third largest globally in 2024. The annual rate of expansion has varied greatly throughout the past years.
By 2011, solar PV provided 18 TWh of Germany's electricity, or about 3% of the total. That year the federal government set a target of 66 GW of installed solar PV capacity by 2030, to be reached with an annual increase of 2.5–3.5 GW, and a goal of 80% of electricity from renewable sources by 2050.
Germany alone accounted for 26% of EU wind generation growth in the first nine months of this year. German renewables hit records in the first nine months of 2024, accounting for 59% of total power generation. This marks a considerable increase from 52% in the same period of 2023, and continues the trend of strong growth in recent years.