“Powerful, highly efficient pumped-storage hydro stations play a key role in making Germany’s energy supply reliable and flexible. Pumped-storage stations are superbly suited to balancing out the intermittent output of renewables because they can store energy very efficiently and come onstream at a moment’s notice to supply zero-carbon, environmentally friendly electricity,” E.ON Energie CEO Dr. Ingo Luge said.
The Waldeck site is ideal for building new capacity because of the existing facility and infrastructure. The new plant, including the penstock pipes and generating equipment, will be built completely under ground, making it particularly environmentally friendly. It will be built directly next to Waldeck pumped-storage hydro station and use the same access tunnel. The reservoirs for the new plant already exist. The volume of Waldeck 2’s upper reservoir will be increased by about 10 percent by raising its retaining walls. The next plant will use Waldeck’s existing, on-site switching yard to deliver power onto the network.
When the new plant becomes operational in 2016, Waldeck will have a total of 920 megawatts of flexible capacity for generating power and for storing power that is not needed when it is produced. This is equal to about 15 percent of Germany’s total pumped-storage capacity. “Enlarging Waldeck pumped-storage hydro station underscores E.ON’s ambitious plans for supporting renewables growth in Germany. Renewables can only begin to realize their full potential when they work in tandem with flexible energy-storage systems like pumped-storage hydro stations,” Luge continued.
E.ON is one of Germany and Europe’s biggest hydro operators, with 212 facilities in four countries and total installed hydro capacity of nearly 6.2 gigawatts.