How do we get electricity grids for the future? 1/6

How do we get electricity grids for the future? 1/6

The electrification of everything from Swedish industry to our transport sector is proceeding at a rapid pace and is a prerequisite for combating climate change. While the debate is raging about how to produce more and more electricity, the electricity grids that will deliver it are silent.

This is a major problem. The challenge of getting sufficient electricity grids in place in time is monumental and the costs that ultimately end up on electricity grid customers will be breathtaking. If we do not take the expansion of electricity grids seriously, there is a great risk that there will be no electricity in the outlet and that Sweden will miss the set climate goals, no matter how much wind or nuclear power we build.

The Environment and Public Health Institute (EPHI) has brought together some of the brightest minds to outline the challenges of the future electricity grid in a series of short reports.

In this first of six reports, we get Henrik Henriksson's perspective on the electricity grid issue. In his everyday life, Henriksson is CEO of H2 Green Steel, which uses hydrogen instead of coke to produce steel with minimal environmental impact. Hydrogen production requires significant amounts of reliable electricity, delivered on time, to the right place.

HOW DO WE GET ELECTRICITY GRIDS FOR THE FUTURE PART 1/6

If you fix the grid, we fix the climate! - Henrik Henriksson (pdf)

Henrik Henriksson presents his report

Contact us

Environment and Public Health Institute

The movie house
Borgvägen 1
115 53 Stockholm

info@ephi.se

Org. number: 559342-4947

Latest from ephi.se on TT

Party healthy with Bingo Rimér

Party healthy with Bingo Rimér

Bingo Rimér, no longer a girl photographer, talks about everything from couples therapy to the quality of her sperm. Loneliness is more dangerous than...

Podcast: Health for the unhealthy

156. Doctor's health advice

Jesper Salén, a doctor and general practitioner, gives his view on why so many people turn to health services with problems that shouldn't really be dealt with by a doctor. But there is one group that should actually seek more care according to Salén - menstruating women. 

read more

155. The controversial fatigue syndrome

Why is fatigue syndrome only found in Sweden? And is it really a blanket diagnosis that lumps together several conditions? Taking it seriously is not the same as treating it medically, says Arwa Josefsson, a doctor and specialist in general medicine and...

read more

154. Jakob Forssmed on loneliness

Can a more liberal alcohol policy solve loneliness, or is it the responsibility of civil society? Together with Social Affairs Minister Jakob Forssmed (KD), we explore why loneliness is a political issue and what measures can help. 

read more

152. The optimal diet

In this week's episode, we answer listener questions about how to eat and the much-hyped long-life drug metformin. 

read more

151. Freud, a pathological liar

Author and journalist Christian Dahlström talks about his latest book "The Only Right Doctrine", which examines Sigmund Freud and the history of psychoanalysis in Sweden. 

read more