Climate neutrality and nuclear phase-out: Switzerland’s ambitious green electricity targets are realistic if the electricity supply is profoundly and rapidly transformed, as a study by the SWEET EDGE consortium shows. The researchers developed three strategies for expanding renewable energies.
Approved by the Swiss parliament on 29 September 2023, the «Mantelerlass» is a set of measures aimed at accelerating the development of renewable energies. It sets a target of 35 TWh/year from new green technologies (solar, wind, wood and biogas) by 2035, compared with the level of around 6 TWh/year in 2022. This target would represent around half of Switzerland’s electricity demand that could be expected in 2035. The other half would be met by hydroelectric power and imports. And all without relying on nuclear power or large fossil fuel power stations.
In this context, the «EDGE consortium» of the SWEET programme of the Swiss Federal Office of Energy (SFOE), which brings together scientists from UNIGE, UNIBE, EPFL, ETH Zurich and other partners, has worked on four targets for electricity production between now and 2035: 17 TWh/year, 25 TWh/year and 35 TWh/year using a mix of new renewable energies, and 25 TWh/year using solar energy alone. Each target has been assessed by three modelling teams to define three strategies for attaining it at minimum cost. The technical, regional, economic and social implications of each strategy were carefully analysed.
The first strategy combines new technologies as far as possible, guaranteeing diversity and security of supply. To achieve the most ambitious target (35 TWh/year), this strategy implies a mix of 25 TWh/year of photovoltaic solar, 8 TWh/year of biomass and waste, and 2 TWh/year of wind power. Here, even with the lowest target (17 TWh/year, which would imply 15 TWh/year less solar), photovoltaic remains the dominant energy source.
‘‘This strategy involves discreet solar installations on facades and on rooftops. So, it would be well accepted. With the lower production targets, they would already be found all over the country. With the high target, they would be even more widespread in Ticino and Valais, where sunshine is abundant,’’ explains Evelina Trutnevyte, co-coordinator of SWEET EDGE, Associate Professor of Renewable Energy Systems at UNIGE. Wind farms would ideally be located in the Jura mountains, in north-eastern Switzerland and in the French-speaking part of the country.
The second strategy focuses on solar photovoltaic installations with storage batteries for individual consumption, located on private roofs. This option requires a more active commitment on the part of citizens but has the advantage of avoiding certain less widely accepted technologies. With a target of 35 TWh/year, solar power should supply 31 TWh/year, supplemented by 4 TWh/year from existing biomass and waste-to-energy plants.
‘‘For the 17 TWh/year and 25 TWh/year targets, photovoltaic installations would be deployed in the cantons of Berne, Zurich and other cantons in central Switzerland, where the density of buildings capable of hosting them is high and where promotion policies are assumed to be more supportive, based on the current situation. To reach 35 TWh/year, the cantons of Graubünden and Valais would also have to build many more installations, including in open fields. Higher capacity factors in these cantons lead to a decrease of the installations in the cantons of Bern, Zurich and central Switzerland,’’ explains Giovanni Sansavini, Professor of Reliability and Risk Engineering at ETH Zurich.
The third strategy focuses on optimising production for wind and photovoltaic infrastructures, including photovoltaics on rooftops and in open fields. It offers the advantage of concentrating installations on the most productive sites and avoiding investment in biomass and waste treatment plants. To reach 35 TWh/year, this option requires a mix of 30 TWh/year of photovoltaic and 5 TWh/year of wind power.
‘‘With this option, most photovoltaic solar plants would be concentrated in Alpine municipalities, particularly in the cantons of Graubünden and Valais, assuming that some of these plants would also be built in the open field, rather than integrated into existing buildings or infrastructure, but would limit winter import most efficiently,’’ explains Michael Lehning, co-coordinator of SWEET EDGE, full professor at EPFL and WSL, Director of the Laboratory of Cryospheric Sciences and CLIMACT.
Investment of between CHF 0.5 billion and CHF 2.1 billion a year would be required from now until 2035. The third strategy (‘‘productivity’’) would be the cheapest (CHF 0.5 billion per year to reach 17 TWh/year, and CHF 1.4 billion per year for 35 TWh/year), as it requires the construction of the lowest number of plants. The first strategy (‘‘diversity’’) would cost the most to achieve (CHF 1.7 billion) but would rank second of the other three targets. Taking all targets and strategies together, the 25 TWh target with all-solar power would be the most expensive (up to CHF 2 billion). As photovoltaics is the dominant energy source for all models, it would absorb at least 80% of all the sums required.
Depending on the strategies and targets, setting up the generation capacity needed could employ as many as 18,000 to 57,000 persons full-time every year until 2035. Manufacturing jobs could be assumed to account for 33%, construction and installation 62%, operation and maintenance 4%, and plant renewal 1%. With a target of 35 TWh/year, photovoltaics with batteries would generate the largest number of jobs (50,000). The largest number of jobs would be needed for setting up photovoltaic capacity. For the first and third strategies, they would be concentrated in the cantons of southern and south-western Switzerland; in the case of the second strategy, mainly in the cantons of Berne and Zurich.
Along with the three strategies and their techno-economic evaluation, the report also documents, based on survey data, that current concerns about energy supply security that have gained in importance since the Russian attack on Ukraine go hand in hand with a strong desire to aim for energy independence and domestic renewable energy production. Nevertheless, as Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen from the University of Bern states, ‘‘wind energy and ground-mounted photovoltaics – like nuclear energy – remain a controversial topic among the population.’’ The Professor of Comparative Politics is responsible for a large population survey that was designed and conducted by the University of Bern and forms the basis for the acceptance analyses.
The three models show that the four electricity production targets are technically achievable without nuclear power and without large fossil fuel plants. The higher the target, the less electricity Switzerland needs to import. With a target of 35 TWh/year, Switzerland can produce enough renewable electricity to nearly cover its consumption on a yearly basis. Nevertheless, net electricity imports will remain an essential tool for balancing supply and demand, especially in winter. All in all, these results support the most ambitious targets, including that of 35 TWh/year recently approved by the Swiss parliament.
SWEET (SWiss Energy research for the Energy Transition) is a «funding programme of the Swiss Federal Office of Energy (SFOE)» with the aim of promoting innovations for the Swiss Energy Strategy 2050 and the climate targets. «SWEET EDGE» is a consortium funded by SWEET and coordinated by the University of Geneva and EPFL. The University of Bern, ETH Zurich and other partners are also involved. The project aims to accelerate the use of renewable energies in Switzerland and ensure that the energy system is optimally designed, technically and economically secure and well networked with Europe by 2035 and 2050.
Author: Editorial team, ETH Zurich. Based on PR1 and PR2.