Publications /
Opinion

Back
WEF 2024: How Can AI Drive a More-Effective Energy Transition?
Authors
Carolina Novac
February 15, 2024

The author of this piece, Carolina Novac, is a 2023 alumna of the Atlantic Dialogues Emerging Leaders program. Learn more about her here.

 

This year, I had the honor to participate for the first time in the World Economic Forum (WEF), as a member of the delegation of Moldovan Prime Minister Dorin Recean. WEF has always been a melting pot of innovative ideas, and a place where world leaders, business giants, and thought leaders can bring suitable, joint solutions to the main challenges we all face today. Two wars are already shaking 2024, and now the global community faces some huge technological challenges with artificial intelligence (AI) being at the point of full take-off.

I wanted to share some humble reflections gathered during and after WEF 2024 (which took place in Davos from January 15-19) on the role AI can have in energy-system transformation. More than 140 countries, including the biggest polluters, have net-zero targets to be achieved by 2050, and the global energy system as a whole is currently undergoing a massive transformation, in the context of electricity demand expected to more than double by 2050. In the decades ahead, the net-zero goal requires billions of euros of investment channeled annually at high speed, to further more decentralization with higher renewables (RES) penetration and digitalization at the heart of it.

AI has tremendous potential to accelerate and support the global energy transition, but also make it more resilient. Although AI has little to do with production, transportation, or consumption of both electrons and molecules, it can optimize all these processes interlinked in the energy system.

At WEF 2024, I particularly found insightful the session on ‘AI for the Energy Transition’ with Remi Eriksen, DNV’s CEO, and Lauren Woodman, CEO of the NGO DataKind as key speakers.

As I cover energy decarbonization at the Ministry of Energy, in the Republic of Moldova, below are some key takeaways from the Forum, showing where AI could play a significant role in the energy sector:

1- Utilizing AI for efficient electricity management and its distribution, while securing broad efficiency improvements. With more RES integration—meaning more variable energy, expansion of electrification, increased numbers of electric vehicles, and decarbonization of heating and cooling systems—a focal point will be distributed energy resources, as more autonomous systems operate within horizontally integrated energy sources, which can enable certain communities to operate more independently. The role of AI here can be a close-to-real-time matching of generation of RES vs consumption per community, while storing excess electricity and minimizing costs for consumers and shifting to more autonomous decisions of prosumers.

2- Alerting operators to possible grid congestion, especially in times of bad weather. During storms and/or low temperatures, electricity distribution grids can be impacted significantly, especially if they rely on overhead power lines, which can be damaged or severed more often than underground cables. Such a situation arose in Moldova on January 7, 2024, when it took three days for full restoration of the power supply to 80 000 household consumers in the country, in the wake of a bad winter storm. AI can offer some solutions in terms of assessing the need for changes to grid components which would suffer damage in such storms, identifying deterioration, and highlighting high congestion at certain parts of the grid. AI can also play a role in maintenance and operation of conventional power plants when it has certain operational problems, and can notify operators of faults in due time.

3- More accurate RES trading on Day-Ahead and Intra-Day platforms thanks to AI integrated into weather forecasting software. More green-power procurement can be achieved with cross-cutting efficiency in terms of optimization of production, distribution, and consumption, and provision of a better matching of generation and consumption—specifically, in terms of forecasting energy production, balancing the grid, reducing possible losses, and securing energy savings.

4- Using data science to better tackle inequity and energy vulnerability. How can we use it for an equitable transition given also the last two years of energy crises across Europe and high energy price volatility? Lauren Woodman, CEO of the NGO DataKind, referred to a fantastic project deployed by her NGO, in the US which targeted vulnerable energy consumers in a community in which resources/compensation could be better allocated. Application of AI software with better datasets has resulted in better allocation of limited resources per each final consumer.

5- Augmenting AI tools by training staff in an appropriate way, bringing online new skills and building on human capital development. In this context, state institutions should look at reallocating their resources to facilitate this, by retraining employees on use of these tools. The private sector is already deploying AI tools, minimizing their costs and maximizing the benefits and further reducing possible risks.

6- Accelerating innovation and enhancing a new set of solutions in terms of processes, services, and products, such as: 1) improving current technologies, and 2) discovering new materials and solutions. AI is set to amplify that set of new technologies or ‘unknown knowns’, meaning products and solutions which we know are on the way to be discovered or commercialized, and which will further get us closer to the net-zero goal.

 

The main challenge of the energy transition is to build in an optimal fashion a more sustainable, affordable, and secure energy system. This can be done, despite its complexity, with the deployment of AI tools, which can help improve efficiency and up-scale new innovative products and accelerate the energy transition.

 

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    July 28, 2017
    Renewable energy technologies are projected to have substantial growth in the coming decades, especially given the environmental, social and economic drivers observed globally. The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region encloses abundant alternative energy sources such as solar, wind and hydropower. The concern is more whether the Arab region will be able to respond to and manage the growth opportunities in this emerging sector. This Policy Brief explores opportunities and chall ...
  • July 26, 2017
    This podcast is performed by Dr. Rabi Mohtar. Renewable energy technologies are projected to have substantial growth in the coming decades, especially given the environmental, social and ...
  • Authors
    July 24, 2017
    The progressive warming of Earth suggests an important danger for future populations. As stabilizing the level of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere becomes inadequate, there is now talk of reducing this level while preserving sustainable economic growth rates. This Policy Brief deals with the issue of the economy’s carbon intensity1 through a decoupling indicator, defined as the ratio between the change in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and Gross Domestic Product (GDP). It a ...
  • May 16, 2017
    Ce podcast est présenté par Mme. Gabrielle Desarnaud, chercheur au Centre Energie de l’IFRI. Un peu plus de trois ans se sont écoulés depuis le lancement des routes de la soie par le Prés ...
  • Authors
    April 12, 2017
    We argue in this paper that electricity production needs to be multiplied by a large factor in the coming years for East Africa to reach the economic growth rate it deserves after the improvement of its socio-political situation. The rural electrification rate in North Africa as represented for instance by Morocco was higher than 99.50% in the first quarter of 2017 while it was barely 10% in some parts of Western Kenya. We also make the case for hydroelectricity as the adequate ren ...
  • Authors
    March 29, 2017
    Dans un contexte mondial de plus en plus préoccupé par les aléas climatiques, comprendre l’impact de la croissance économique sur l’environnement devient crucial, notamment pour les pays en voie de développement. Ce papier aborde cette problématique sous le prisme des émissions de dioxyde de carbone (CO2) et examine comment la croissance économique se répercute sur l’environnement. L’objectif de cette étude est de tester la validité de la courbe environnementale de Kuznets (CEK) pou ...
  • Authors
    Laura El Katiri
    December 30, 2016
    Le paysage énergétique du Maroc a connu une évolution rapide au cours des dernières décennies. La croissance démographique, l'industrialisation et la hausse du niveau de vie, qui se sont accompagnés d'une augmentation des taux d'accès à l'électricité, ainsi que de taux élevés d'exode rural, ont tous contribué à l'expansion des besoins énergétiques du Maroc. Étant voisin d'une Algérie riche en pétrole et en gaz à l'Est, et d'une Europe avide d'énergie au nord de la Méditerranée, le M ...
  • Authors
    Priscillia Andrieu
    October 24, 2016
    Africa is the new frontier of a global energy transition during a century in which people are rightfully preoccupied by climate change and sustainable development. Energy access in Africa can be reached through unity within and across the continent. Eliminating the obstacles of the historical divisions of the continent – whether linguistic, economic, or geographic – would foment investments and development aid. The African Union would be best equipped to reallocate and redistribute ...
  • Authors
    Laura El Katiri
    October 18, 2016
    Morocco’s energy landscape has been changing rapidly over the past decades. Alongside its own population growth, rising access rates to electricity as well as high rates of rural-urban migration and rising living standards, Morocco’s domestic energy needs have risen sharply since the early 1990s. This policy paper explores Morocco’s long-term energy options, focusing on “green” energy solutions that lie within Morocco’s natural competitive advantage. Using Morocco’s strategic assets ...
  • Authors
    Carole Mathieu
    October 12, 2016
    In December 2015, a new international climate agreement was adopted, paving the way for increased mitigation and adaptation efforts. Governments firmly expressed the need for rapid action and 2016 will put the credibility of their commitments to the test. Climate policies are actually becoming more widespread, but they are also adjusting to local constraints and needs, suggesting that the establishment of a global emission regulation model is unlikely in the near future. While the l ...