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I mentioned in a post some time ago now that, at present, the renewable energy debate here in Australia is mired in economic issues, not technical issues this forum is concerned with.
It still is, but a new twist has appeared - the need for synchronous condensers:
https://search.abb.com/library/Down...LanguageCode=en&DocumentPartId=&Action=Launch
All sides seem to agree they are needed, and the discussion is now around their economics.
The economics is not in this forum's ballywick, but what they are and how they work is.
I remember my father mentioned they were used a lot in the 1950s (he worked as an electrical estimator, primarily for power stations), but gradually grew out of favour.
I thought a discussion of what they are, why they went out of favour, and why they are important for renewable energy would be of value.
So over to the professionals. What, technically, are they and the reason for their comeback?
Thanks
Bill
It still is, but a new twist has appeared - the need for synchronous condensers:
https://search.abb.com/library/Down...LanguageCode=en&DocumentPartId=&Action=Launch
All sides seem to agree they are needed, and the discussion is now around their economics.
The economics is not in this forum's ballywick, but what they are and how they work is.
I remember my father mentioned they were used a lot in the 1950s (he worked as an electrical estimator, primarily for power stations), but gradually grew out of favour.
I thought a discussion of what they are, why they went out of favour, and why they are important for renewable energy would be of value.
So over to the professionals. What, technically, are they and the reason for their comeback?
Thanks
Bill
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