In order to promote the rapid development of pumped storage, meet the needs of new power system construction and large-scale and high proportion of new energy development, and help achieve the goal of carbon peak and carbon neutrality, the National Energy Administration recently issued the "Pumped Storage Medium and Long Term Development Plan (2021-2035)" (hereinafter referred to as the Plan).
[pdf] Construction has not started. The Romanian state is looking for investors. The strategic environmental assessment (SEA) procedure is at the beginning, the environmental impact assessment (EIA) procedure did not start yet, as the project consultants admitted publicly on 17 November 2010. In 2016 the Romanian government stated that several smaller projects were being considered instead. In 2019, Romania’s Forecast and Strategy National Committee (CNSP) started a procedure for finding a privat. The Tarnița–Lăpuștești Hydropower Plant is a proposed hydroelectric pumped-storage project on the Someșul Cald River in Cluj County, Romania. If built it would be the largest hydro-electric load balancing system in Romania.
[pdf] Yes, it’s been around since the 1920s, but pumped hydro still provides 94% of global energy storage capacity [1]. Lebanon’s mountainous terrain offers prime sites for closed-loop systems. Pro tip: Pair it with wind farms in the Bekaa Valley for 24/7 renewable power.
[pdf] This new World Bank project will finance the necessary grid investment and Botswana’s first 50MW utility-scale battery energy storage system to enable the first wave of renewable energy generation to be smoothly integrated and managed in the grid.
[pdf] Pumped storage hydropower (PSH) is a type of hydroelectric energy storage. It is a configuration of two water reservoirs at different elevations that can generate power as water moves down from one to the other (discharge), passing through a turbine.
[pdf] The global hydropower development pipeline now exceeds 1,075 GW, including 600GW of pumped storage and 475GW of conventional projects. China continues to dominate global hydropower development, with 14.4GW of new capacity added in 2024, including 7.75GW of PSH.
[pdf]