World Grid Project Blog
The blog is an evolving collection of past and present articles documenting the unfolding of the global energy grid. This is one way in which we are identifying, tracking and mapping cases of what Bucky called spontaneous cooperation among countries that are integrating their power grids across political boundaries - critical steps leading to the formation of a globally connected grid.
Cross-border Electricity Trade/Power Grid Integration
Global Chronological News Tracker
Spontaneous Cooperation: The world grid is self-organizing invisibly right before our eyes.
Please review posts below. For further questions or to be in touch with a resource : contact Greg Watson
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Implications of intercontinental renewable electricity trade for energy systems and emissions (nature.com)
We find that renewable electricity trade across large world regions via the underlying UHVDC interconnection can boost renewable electricity production and reduce 2020–2100 cumulative CO2 emissions from the power sector up to 9.8%.
The World Grid and New Geographies of Cooperation
The world’s transition away from fossil fuels is not only inevitable, but in fact is well underway. This sentiment, until recently acknowledged primarily by environmentalists and clean energy advocates, is now being embraced and even championed by the likes of Shell Energy and bp (formerly British Petroleum, rebranded as Beyond Petroleum). We have emerged from what Buckminster Fuller referred to as humanity’s womb of permitted ignorance.
Green Grids Initiative – One Sun One World One Grid: One Sun Declaration (National Archives)
The untapped potential of the sun is well known – all the energy humanity uses in a year is equal to the energy that reaches the earth from the sun in a single hour. The sun never sets – every hour, half the planet is bathed in sunshine. By trading energy from sun, wind and water across borders, we can deliver more than enough clean energy to meet the needs of everyone on earth.
Thinking Globally, Acting Locally – And Vice Versa
An interconnected globe-spanning grid would connect everyone to the same energy-accounting system. The universal grid could be connected modularly to regional, local and micro-grids.
The Electrification of Everything: What You Need to Know (Wall Street Journal)
If you’ve lost power anytime recently, you’ve come face to face with one of the fundamental truths about energy today: There are a lot of things we once could do without electricity that now require it.