Modern electric systems increasingly use Direct Current for both production and consumption. Solar panels and fuel cells generate DC, while wind farms produce AC that must be converted. Many devices, like servers, laptops, BESS, supercapacitors, and EVs, run on DC, and sectors such as maritime and aviation also use it.
Advances in power electronics have made DC more efficient and cost-effective, with lower material use and better controllability. However, its wider adoption faces technical, regulatory, and standardisation challenges, including limited control algorithms, protection schemes, and simulation tools.
Shift2DC promotes smarter, more efficient, and sustainable energy systems through DC technologies. Coordinated by INESC-ID (Portugal) and involving 33 partners from 12 countries, the project will develop guidelines and a roadmap for large-scale DC adoption.
Demonstrators in Data Centres, Buildings, Industry, and Ports in Germany, France, and Portugal will test tailored DC tools. Feasibility, cost-benefit, life cycle, and environmental impacts will be assessed. Shift2DC also advances standardisation and harmonisation to ensure scalable, replicable solutions that support Europe’s clean energy transition.
The project, running from December 2023 to November 2027, is tackling these challenges head-on. By Month 18, the project has completed 8 of 30 tasks and submitted 13 of 30 deliverables. Key results to date include:
- D1.1: A first vision of existing DC applications, challenges, opportunities, and potential evolution.
- D1.2: An assessment of policies and regulatory frameworks, identifying barriers and offering early recommendations.
- D1.3: A use case repository for the demonstrators.
- D1.4: Specifications for tools and devices to be developed in WP2 and WP3 and tested in WP4.
- D1.5: IT requirements for the demonstrator phase.
- D1.6: Analysis of user perspectives on DC adoption.
- D2.1: A design tool for MVDC and LVDC systems.
- D4.1: Design specifications and results for the four demonstrators.
- D5.1: A preliminary innovation and exploitation methodology.
- D6.1: A communication and dissemination plan defining project strategies.
- D7.1 & D7.2: Project management strategy and its update based on lessons from the first 18 months.
- D7.4: A Data Management Plan with clear guidelines for the consortium.