EirGrid

EirGrid plc is the state-owned electric power transmission operator in Ireland. It is a public limited company registered under the Companies Acts; its shares are held by the Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources. It is one of a number of Irish state-sponsored bodies and is regulated by the Commission for Energy Regulation.

EirGrid plc
Public limited company
IndustryElectricity
Founded6 January 2006 (2006-01-06)
Headquarters,
Key people
Mark Foley (Chief Executive)[1]
John O'Connor (Chairperson)
ServicesElectricity market operator
OwnerIrish Government
Number of employees
approx. 1000
Websitewww.eirgrid.com

History

EirGrid was established under Irish and European laws including the European Communities (Internal Market in Electricity) Regulations, 2000, to enable competition in the Irish power sector. It took over operation of the national power system on July 1, 2006. ESB (the Electricity Supply Board) currently holds ownership of the physical assets.

The transmission assets constitute 6,500 km of overhead line and underground cable, as well as over 100 bulk substations. The system's significance for competition is that most large independent generators connect to the transmission system and utilise it to transport their power to all regions. EirGrid also operates the wholesale power market.

Role

EirGrid's primary purposes are the daily management of the Irish national grid, the operation of the wholesale power market, and the development of high voltage infrastructure to serve Ireland's economy. The Irish National Grid is a 3-phase wide area synchronous grid that is not synchronised with the UK's National Grid. The high voltage transmission system has been likened to "motorways for power" or "broadband power" providing electricity in high quality and in bulk to all regions. Transmission is seen as a key factor in facilitating inward investment by bodies like the Industrial Development Authority (IDA) and the development body Forfas. It is also seen as critical to increased renewable energy by organisations like Sustainable Energy Ireland (SEI) and the Irish Wind Energy Association (IWEA). EirGrid is currently developing a large number of major transmission projects. It is working with the regulator in line with Irish Government policy to develop a second major transmission line to Northern Ireland. The 500 MW East–West Interconnector linking the Irish power system to Great Britain[2] was commissioned in 2012.[3] EirGrid will own that interconnector after it is developed, under the Irish Government decision.

EirGrid has its own separate board and is regulated by the Commission for Energy Regulation (the CER) and its shares are held by the Irish Government. EirGrid is responsible for balancing electricity consumption and generation, for the safe, secure and economical operation of the power system, and for the planning and development of the Irish power grid. Under the Single Electricity Market, EirGrid operates the wholesale power market on the island of Ireland with System Operator of Northern Ireland (SONI), which it now owns. More information on the functions of EirGrid, along with graphs of electricity demand/wind generation output updated every 15 minutes, are available on its website. Information on the Single Electricity Market Operator (SEMO) is also at that website.

gollark: Well, you play as a square, which can move in various directions and is subject to gravity.
gollark: The switch actually disables the speed of light.
gollark: Unrelatedly, OBSERVE gaming.
gollark: Works quite well in some people who are resistant to other treatment.
gollark: It is actually used (legally) as an antidepressant now.

See also

  • Electricity Supply Board

References

  1. Eirgrid names Mark Foley as new chief executive
  2. "Project Activity". East-West Interconnector. EirGrid. 16 September 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-10-04. Retrieved 2009-09-29.
  3. UK-Ireland energy cable opens to bolster wind power
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.