Vlaamse regering geeft gezinnen voorrang op overvol stroomnet, datacenters achteraan
By
@tijd
Summary
De Vlaamse meerderheidspartijen hebben voorrangsregels opgesteld voor het overvolle stroomnet. Gezinnen krijgen voorrang, gevolgd door bedrijven die flexibel hun verbruik kunnen aanpassen om netcongestie te vermijden. Datacenters en batterijparken komen als laatste in de rij. De maatregelen moeten de druk op het overbelaste elektriciteitsnet verlichten en prioriteit geven aan essentiële gebruikers.
Source
Key quotes
· 3 pulledGezinnen krijgen voorrang op overvol stroomnet, datacenters komen laatste
Bedrijven die flexibel hun verbruik aanpassen om 'files' op het net te vermijden krijgen voorrang
Datacenters en batterijparken komen als laatste in de rij
You might also wanna read

Manitoba government explored U.S. partnership for AI data centre and $18B hydro dam revival
Manitoba's NDP government, led by Premier Wab Kinew, held discussions with U.S. energy advisers last fall about developing a hyperscale AI d
Virginia's economic future depends on modern electric grid infrastructure
This guest column argues that Virginia's continued economic growth depends on urgently building modern electric grid infrastructure to suppo

Scottish wind farms face £1bn grid charges while English projects receive payments, data shows
Clean energy projects in Scotland are forecast to pay approximately £1 billion in generation charges to use the UK's electricity grid by 203
Humber hydrogen network campaign seeks £500m in UK government funding
Industry leaders, trade unions, and politicians held a parliamentary meeting to campaign for £500m in government funding to establish the Hu
SSEN Transmission launches £7.4bn supply chain framework for Scottish grid upgrades
SSEN Transmission has launched a new £7.4 billion supply chain framework to support its £29 billion investment programme for upgrading the e
Duke Energy uses data center demand to justify rate hike and new gas plants in North Carolina
Duke Energy is seeking an 18% rate increase for households in North Carolina, partly justified by massive projected energy demand from data
Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.
