Réseau de Transport d'Électricité

Réseau de Transport d'Électricité (Electricity Transmission Network), usually known as RTE, is the electricity transmission system operator of France. It is responsible for the operation, maintenance and development of the French high-voltage transmission system, which at approximately 100,000 kilometres (62,000 mi), is Europe's largest.[1][2]

Réseau de Transport d'Électricité
Société anonyme
IndustryPublic utility
FoundedJuly 2000 (July 2000)
Headquarters,
France
Serviceselectricity transmission
Revenue4,126 million (2007)
Number of employees
8279 (2007)
ParentÉlectricité de France
Websitewww.rte-france.com
Previous logo

RTE is a wholly owned subsidiary of the partially public-owned French generator Électricité de France (EdF), headquartered in Paris. It is a limited liability corporation, known in France as a société anonyme.

Corporation

History

RTE was formed as a result of European Directive No. 96/92/EC of December 1996, which directed that at least 26% of member countries' electricity sales be open to competition, and became law in France in February 2000.[3] The directive required France to liberalise its electricity market by unbundling its generation and transmission activities, which until then had been fully controlled by EdF. RTE was established in July 2000 as a division of EdF, with a public charter to guarantee equitable access to its electricity market, and to secure the continuity and quality of electricity supply.

Further legal acts in July 2004 and August 2005 enforced the legal separation of RTE from EdF, transforming it into a limited liability subsidiary, and granted it trademark rights to its logo and the name Réseau de Transport d'Électricité.

Regulation

RTE's activities are overseen by the Government regulatory body Commission de régulation de l'énergie (Commission for Energy Regulation) (CRE). CRE's duties in this regard include ensuring RTE facilitates access to its network, and to survey and regulate the electricity market while opening it up to competition.[4]

Commercial operations

RTE declared a turnover of 4,126 million in 2007, and yielding a profit of €466 million, both up slightly from the previous year, which RTE attributed to increases in network access payments and revenue derived from interconnector capacity auctions.[5] The workforce in the same year was 8,279.

Data portal

RTE operate an open data portal named Open Data RTE which serves French electricity system data for public reuse.

Transmission network

RTE's transmission system operates at voltages of 63 kV, 90 kV, 150 kV, 225 kV and 400 kV.[6] RTE deems the 63 to 150 kV circuits to be "high voltage" and the 225 kV and 400 kV "extra high voltage". As of the end of 2006, there were 99,676 km (61,940 mi) of transmission lines interconnecting 2,490 substations.[6] Most of the transmission network is carried on 77,544 route-kilometres (48,180 mi) of overhead power lines; only 3,258 km (2,020 mi) of the network consists of underground cable.[6] In common with the rest of Europe, the supply frequency is a nominal 50 Hz.

Demand and trade

France's peak demand occurs during the winter, and in 2007 was 88,960 MW.[7] The annual production of electricity was 544.7 TWh, generated from an installed capacity of 108,319 MW, almost 60% of which was nuclear.[7]

RTE's network interconnects with those of its counterparts in most of France's neighbouring countries, and the international trade (both import and export) of electricity is a major contribution to RTE's business activities. France is the largest exporter of electricity in Europe,[3] and the country is linked via a total of 44 high voltage interconnections[4] to Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium and the United Kingdom, the last of which by means of an HVDC submarine power cable. France's balance of trade in this market is normally positive; in 2007, exports of electrical energy totalled 83.0 TWh and imports 27.5 TWh.[7] The largest trading partner was Switzerland, which imported 26.1 TWh of French electricity and exported 4.4 TWh back.[7]

gollark: The article talks about preserving privacy and such, but this isn't what happened with phones and most people don't seem to care.
gollark: This sounds prone to horrible, horrible data mining but could be very neat.
gollark: It's a shame all the attempts at AR glasses seem to go bankrupt, get bought out by a company which promptly kills it, or get stuck in high end business use forever.
gollark: I finally managed to get HyperRogue to compile and it might be fun.
gollark: <@!239056962980020225> You may also want to check out Jellyfin for media purposes, which is apparently similar to Plex but fully open source.

References

  1. "RTE et Elia envisagent le renforcement de l'interconnexion France-Belgique" (in French). RTE. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
  2. "RTE : le nouveau service gestionnaire au sein d'EDF". La Dépêche du Midi. 28 May 2002. Retrieved 21 November 2008. "... le plus grand réseau de transport d'Europe" ("...the biggest transmission network in Europe"). (in French)
  3. "France Country Analysis Brief". Energy Information Administration. Retrieved 21 November 2008.
  4. "Missions" (in French). Commission de régulation de l'énergie. 5 July 2007. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
  5. "Economic and financial results" (PDF). Annual report 2007. pp. 61–63. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
  6. "Technical specifications of the RTE network". Official website. RTE. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  7. "Overview and key figures of 2007" (PDF). Annual report 2007. pp. 8–15. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.