Despite massive investment in renewables, electricity transmission infrastructure — the critical link between clean energy sources and end users — remains stuck in first gear. If the grid can’t scale, the energy transition stalls.
The stakes are high. Global investment in transmission and distribution grids is expected to more than triple from USD 260 billion today to USD 820 billion by 2030, highlighting the urgency to upgrade and expand networks at speed. Yet progress is slowing, not accelerating.
Transmission project approvals can take 7 to 10 years or more, often longer than it takes to build the infrastructure itself. Cross-border initiatives are further hampered by fragmented regulatory frameworks and inconsistent planning protocols. Meanwhile, equipment lead times for essential components like transformers and conductors are stretching into multiple years, straining global supply chains and putting just-in-time procurement strategies under pressure.
Without a modern, resilient grid, cost-efficient outcomes remain elusive. A US study found that regional coordination in a 100 percent renewable system could slash electricity costs by 46 percent, from USD 135 per megawatt hour to USD 73 per megawatt hour. However, fragmented planning continues to dominate.