The impact of a solar eclipse on European power grids will be negligible despite warnings of blackouts by the chief of the French network.

The solar eclipse in March 2015 will be the first major event in central Europe since 1999 and the first since substantial PV generation was deployed across the continent.

“The passage of this shadow will considerably reduce PV power production,” Dominique Maillard, president of RTE, France’s grid operator said last week. “According to our calculations, the impact could be a drop in production of as much as 30GW across Europe,” he added during RTE’s winter outlook presentation.

The UK operator, National Grid, said the impact on its network would be negligible.

“In general, loss of PV will offset the demand suppression of people watching the eclipse. In the event of bad weather, less people will watch the event, and there will be less PV generation to be lost,” Gillian West, a spokeswoman for the company told Next Energy News.

More problematic during the last total eclipse in the UK, was the power surge after the event, rather than the loss of power during it.

Impact of the 1999 eclipse on the UK's grid. Source National Grid

Impact of the 1999 eclipse on the UK's grid. Source National Grid

“On 11 August 1999, however, there was a solar eclipse with a totality that clipped Cornwall and Devon. Obscuration in London would have been around 95 – 98%. On this occasion, there was one of the largest demand suppressions ever on the E&W system, with a drop of 2200MW, and a pick up at the end of 3000MW,” said West.

The 3000MW pick up is still the largest surge in the UK to this day, larger than the TV-related pickups created by Prince William's wedding and the England football team's numerous ignominious World Cup exits.

“It is likely that there will be less interest in this eclipse, as it will not be as dramatic, but we could still expect around a 1000MW demand suppression in demand, depending on weather on the day. This will be offset by the loss in PV of approximately 1800MW, meaning that the net impact of the loss of PV is likely to be around a 800MW increase in Transmission System Demand over the duration of the event. It is unlikely to cause any major problems to us,” she added.

Clean energy utility Good Energy was also relaxed about the impact of the eclipse.

“Grid companies are used to dealing with sudden swings in power demand and supply, especially when they are anticipated. Although the eclipse will last an hour and a half in total it will move across Europe so each single solar site will be impacted only several minutes, as the eclipse reaches them. The likelihood of power failures are slim,” a spokesman for the company told Next Energy News.