This website uses cookies and similar technologies (hereinafter collectively referred to as ‘cookies’). We may use cookies for the following purposes:
With the buttons below, you can choose which cookies you wish to accept. On our cookie statement page, you can manage your cookie preferences. You can always withdraw your consent for cookies by making different choices there. For more information about cookies, please refer to our cookie statement.
As long as the energy market retains its current formation, increasing the use of wind and solar energy could make burning fossil fuels more attractive. Because these sources are able to deliver quickly, they can become more attractive in the so-called spot market, which includes peaks and falls if the sun does not shine or the wind does not blow. So argue Prof. Wolf Ketter and Derck Koolen in their recent study.
As long as the energy market retains its current formation, increasing the use of wind and solar energy could make burning fossil fuels more attractive. Because these sources are able to deliver quickly, they can become more attractive in the so-called spot market, which includes peaks and falls if the sun does not shine or the wind does not blow. So argue Prof. Wolf Ketter and Derck Koolen in their recent study.