Everyone knows coal plants are bad for the environment. So why do countries still use them? Coalâs attractiveness comes from the relatively low up front capital investment required to start generating energy. On top of that, the rapid rise of variable renewables (solar, wind) need something to rise with it to fill the generation gap when the sun doesnât shine and the wind doesnât blow. In his final instalment - after his similarly detailed … [Read more...]
IEA: Battery storage races to keep up with solar and windâs demand-matching challenges
Yesterdayâs article from the IEA posed the question: will solarâs inherent intermittency slow its rise as a major power supply. For variable renewables like solar and wind to grow to over 50% of global capacity additions by 2040, storage technology must keep up with this pace. For this to happen, âflexibilityâ â the ability of the power system to quickly adapt to changes in power supply and demand â needs to grow by some 80% in the next decade … [Read more...]
IEA: solarâs exponential growth could make it less competitive, not more
Solarâs current growth trajectory means a doubling of annual deployment every three years. But despite further expected reductions in some cost areas (e.g. cheaper tech and economies of scale), the IEAâs new VALCOE (value-adjusted levelised costs of electricity) metric calculates that solarâs relative competitiveness per unit added will actually decline as its inherent demand-matching issues scale up with the growth. Brent Wanner, WEO Energy … [Read more...]
How much subsidy does solar need, and for how long?
Schalk Cloete presents his latest paper looking at what affects the profitability of an investment in a power sector. After reviewing onshore wind and nuclear, he now looks at solar. His analysis of coal and gas are to come. Intermittency, market share, maintenance, integration costs and other factors are modelled in detail to help predict solarâs future. *This article is brought to you via our new author platform. If you have an article you … [Read more...]
The risks related to onshore wind power investment
Bans on subsidies (in some countries) and reduced costs have hit total investment in onshore wind. Meanwhile, market share continues to grow across the EU28. Wind energy now accounts for almost 20% of installed capacity for power generation which makes researcher Schalk Cloete's sobering analysis of risks for onshore wind well worth reading. Following up on his previous article, he examines current assumptions and argues that the discount rate … [Read more...]
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