To combat climate change, governments have pledged to dramatically reduce their dependency on fossil fuels and curb their greenhouse gas emissions. There are extensive renewable energy sites now active all over Europe. Recent figures show that Norway now gets more than 45% of its total electricity needs from hydroelectric power. Germany has over 65GW of wind power capacity (onshore and offshore combined) and this constitutes around 30% of the country’s electricity usage. Italy and Spain have 22.1GW and 14.6GW of solar power capacity respectively. To supplement the more expansive renewable operations, home-based generation will help to contribute to a more sustainable future. Through this, households will be able to sell electricity back to the grid. There are also opportunities for them to support grid balancing, so energy can be stored during times of peak renewable output, then drawn from when grid demand is at its greatest.

It is paramount that energy coming from renewable sources, such as wind and hydro turbines or photovoltaics, can be converted into electricity with maximum efficiency and with losses minimised. This is why wide bandgap discretes, based on either GaN or SiC technology, are now seeing high volume uptake. How the electricity is then dealt with will require advanced power management technology.
EV Charging: The power of three
Discover how to shorten your time-to-market with end-to-end EV charging infrastructure solutions from EBV, Avnet Abacus and Avnet Embedded.
get startedLet's talk
Better connected through LinkedIn
Get directly in touch with our City & Infrastructure Director Andrej Orel

Resources
EBV Podcast
Our new podcast Passion for Technology is dedicated to the latest technologies, trends and applications in the electronics industry.
