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Feature15 December 2022Siemens Energy
In the 1870s, Thomas Edison began developing a practical application
of direct current (DC) to power homes, businesses, and entire cities, including
New York City. However, just 10 years later, Edison and George Westinghouse
engaged in what became known as the "War of the Currents." They battled over whether DC or alternating current (AC) transmission
was the more suitable technology for the large-scale supply of electricity in
the U.S. Ultimately, AC power emerged as
the supposed winner, and today, electricity is predominantly
powered by alternating currents.
In recent years, however, DC has experienced a renaissance. The need for power transmission using high-voltage DC (HVDC)
transmission is increasing with the growing integration of renewables. Why? HVDC
technology plays a fundamentally important role in the energy transition from point-to-point connections over hundreds of kilometers
of land, to power connections between different countries, to connecting wind
farms on the high seas. It is the most efficient way to transmit power over
long distances and a pivotal technology to
live up to new challenges in the wake of the U.S.’s ambitious renewable expansion
plans.
We have huge modernization tasks ahead of us to increase grid resilience and ensure the grid keeps pace with the accelerating shift toward a renewables-powered U.S. Therefore, governments and industries must review current policy mechanisms and business practices.
Tim Holt, Member of the Executive Board at Siemens Energy
Milestones
In this section we inform you about planned future projects in the US for which Siemens Energy and its customers has concluded preferred supplier agreements.
TransWest Express selects Siemens Energy as HVDC technology partner
5 December 2022 - TransWest Express LLC has selected Siemens Energy to supply the high-voltage direct current transmission technology for the TransWest Express Transmission Project.The TWE Project is a 732-mile high-voltage interregional transmission system with HVDC and HVAC segments that will connect to the existing grid in Wyoming and Utah as well as directly to the ISO Controlled Grid in southern Nevada.
Siemens Energy and its affiliates are global leaders in HVDC transmission technology products, services and solutions. Under a Preferred Supplier Agreement signed in November, TransWest and Siemens Energy are partners on the final design, specifications and other technical elements of the HVDC converter stations to be located in Carbon County, Wyoming, and in Millard County, Utah. TransWest and Siemens Energy also are negotiating a definitive contract under which Siemens Energy will engineer, procure and construct the HVDC converter stations and ancillary equipment and systems.
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