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Polish Cabinet backs changes to energy law to speed up grid connections

The Polish Cabinet has approved a revamp of the energy laws to speed up grid connections, prevent developers from ordering capacity that they never use, and increase transparency in the process of connecting to the grid.

The draft is designed to reduce the time it takes for developers to convert an initial agreement into a connection agreement and to increase fees for connection requests in order to alleviate a glut of speculative connections that block access to other users.

Poland is facing?power overload, also known as ghost capacity. This occurs at a moment when the?electricity grid requires investment to increase flexibility, integrate intermittent sources of renewable energy, and reduce connection wait times that are estimated at around three years.

Last year, the Polish power grid PSE announced that project developers had submitted a?motion to connect 130 gigawatts worth of data centres to its grid. This is compared to an industry expert's projected growth of only 1.2 GW by 2034.

PSE needs to integrate 80 GW and 15 GW new renewable capacity by 2034. Renewables will account for 60% of Poland's electricity in 2035.

This bill will guarantee a transparent, fair process to connect to the grid... and ensure that grid connection rights won't be subject to speculation," said Polish Energy Minister Milosz Motyka at a Wednesday news briefing.

To become law, the draft must be approved by both the parliament and the president. (Reporting by Marek Strzelecki, additional reporting by Pawel Florkiewicz)

(source: Reuters)