What happened and how lockdown was handled. From emergency management to restarting, what experience have we gained? First of all, we had to ensure business continuity in safety where—as in the control centres—it was impossible to work from home. Italy was also forerunner in the operation of the transmission grid and, in his explanation of the Italian experience at Stanford, Giacomo Donnini, Terna's Head of Development and Special Projects started with the measures taken in order to allow the system’s core to function normally. For each of the core areas—the Italian National Control Centre and the 3 regional control centres—a reserve or “backup” centre has been activated where necessary. With each shift change, personnel rotated from the operations centre to the reserve centre (or vice versa) to allow the work centres to be sanitised in the meantime. Plexiglass screens have also been installed between the desks. As a last resort, if 3 regular shifts were infected and placed on lockdown, the control centre team would have been quarantined in special dormitories for 15 days. In such case, teams located in different, non-infected areas would have entered into service. In order to do all this, all operator training activities and shift changes were decided by teleconference, with the operational teams strictly separated from each other.
A leap forward for renewables. “During lockdown”, Donnini explained to attendees of the Stanford event, “the weekly demand for electricity recorded a sharp decrease, with a peak of 24% year on year in the week between 6 and 12 April 2020. As a result, the impact of renewables has increased up to 15 percentage points compared to 2019”. A real shock to face in such a short period of time as that between 3 March and the partial reopening on 4 May 2020. Abnormal peaks in the coverage of electricity demand via RESs had been recorded in the past, but what led Terna to face critical operating situations this time was the higher frequency and duration of peak demand. A phenomenon which, Donnini mentioned at Stanford, “will be even more pronounced in 2030”.
April that recorded the most significant differences in demand (-17% year on year) compared to March and May (-10%). In particular, on 5 April, with low electricity demand and high production from renewables, the reserve margin, which had already collapsed from 25% in 2014 to 6% in 2019, ended up below zero in areas like the South and Sicily. “In these conditions”, said Donnini, “the scarce availability of sources required for dispatching can put management of the electrical system to the test for the TSO”.
“During the Covid-19 emergency, the Italian electricity system experienced a leap forward to 2025 if we consider the drop in the share of thermoelectric generation, which fell 4 points on the total national demand”, he added. He also recalled that thermoelectric capacity increased from 77 to 56 Gigawatts between 2012 and 2020, with a parallel increase in electricity from renewable sources, whose weight on demand is expected to increase by 125% between 2019 and 2030. Impressive numbers and estimates provided a measure of the transformation currently under way and which other countries such as Australia are experiencing much as we are in terms of intensity and breadth.