Solar and Wind Are Reaching for the Last 90% of the US Power Market (bloomberg.com) 253
An anonymous reader shares a report: Three decades ago, the U.S. passed an infinitesimal milestone: solar and wind power generated one-tenth of one percent of the country's electricity. It took 18 years, until 2008, for solar and wind to reach 1% of U.S. electricity. It took 12 years for solar and wind to increase by another factor of 10. In 2020, wind and solar generated 10.5% of U.S. electricity. If this sounds a bit like a math exercise, that's because it is. Anything growing at a compounded rate of nearly 18%, as U.S. wind and solar have done for the past three decades, will double in four years, then double again four years after that, then again four years after that, and so on. It gets confusing to think in so many successive doublings, especially when they occur more than twice a decade. Better, then, to think in orders of magnitude -- 10^10.
There are a number of reasons why exponential consideration matters. The first is that U.S. power demand isn't growing, and hasn't since wind and solar reached that 1% milestone in the late 2000s. That means that the growth of wind and solar -- and that of natural gas-fired power -- have come entirely at the expense of coal-fired power. That replacement of coal with either natural gas (half the emissions of coal) or with wind and solar (zero emissions) is certainly an environmental achievement. Coupled with last year's massive drop in emissions, that power shift also makes it much easier for the U.S. to meet its Paris Agreement obligations.
There are a number of reasons why exponential consideration matters. The first is that U.S. power demand isn't growing, and hasn't since wind and solar reached that 1% milestone in the late 2000s. That means that the growth of wind and solar -- and that of natural gas-fired power -- have come entirely at the expense of coal-fired power. That replacement of coal with either natural gas (half the emissions of coal) or with wind and solar (zero emissions) is certainly an environmental achievement. Coupled with last year's massive drop in emissions, that power shift also makes it much easier for the U.S. to meet its Paris Agreement obligations.
Wives (Score:3, Insightful)
Obligatory
https://xkcd.com/605/ [xkcd.com]
Re:Wives (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
I hope they're taking into account that as soon as the pandemic is addressed and things go back to "normall"....those levels are going to pretty much rocket back to where they were all things being equal.
Re: (Score:3)
https://www.carbonbrief.org/an... [carbonbrief.org]
"The world has already passed "peak oil" demand, according to Carbon Brief analysis of the latest energy outlook from oil major BP.
According to BP, the pandemic has cut the outlook for long-term energy demand in two ways. First, it cuts the prospects for economic growth and, second, it is assumed that some behavioural changes - notably, home working - will persist, even as other changes dissipate over time."
Of course this doesn't mean
Re: (Score:2)
I agree in part, with it being down a little bit..due to many continuing to wo
Re: (Score:2)
Did the pandemic take cars off the roads, or did car manufacturers keep pumping out new cars that were snapped up by workers that suddenly found themselves flush with cash after bars, nightclubs, theaters, sporting events, vacations, etc were all cancelled for most of the past year?
They may be driving less now, but when the economy opens up, they'll start driving those new cars everywhere, rather than fly to visit relatives.
Re: (Score:2)
I hope things don't go back to how they were. Don't need to be in the office 5 days a week, and the high street around here was already crap and dying anyway. Delivery improved a lot due to COVID so now online shopping is a lot more viable for a lot more stuff.
Re: (Score:2)
So who is requiring permission to travel and why?
Re: (Score:2)
At the very least, I don't see it as beyond the very realistic realm of possibility that vaccination documentation will be required for many things, including travel by air, etc....
A little too scary close to: "Papers Please...?"
Re: (Score:2)
That would be so ironic if all the airlines/trains/buses required vaccines and the conservatives started crying about it. Free market at work baby. Oh the market isn't working in your favor and you want the government to step in dictate how business can operate? Doesn't sound very conservative to me. Start your own airline if you don't like their terms.
Re: (Score:2)
Actually I think you misunderstood my meaning.
I was implying that the GOVERNMENT would be setting these rules and enforcing "papers please" much like some
Re: (Score:2)
At the very least, I don't see it as beyond the very realistic realm of possibility that vaccination documentation will be required for many things, including travel by air, etc....
A little too scary close to: "Papers Please...?"
At the very least? I think requiring vaccination evidence to fly is the most I can imagine. Maybe require evidence of vaccination or a negative test upon entry to the country, without restrictions on domestic flights. But I can't picture needing vaccination records to get on a commuter train.
Re: (Score:2)
the strawmen that right wingers vomit out are become more ridiculous every day
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah right. There's millions of surplus votes in CA. You think they're going to mind sending a million or so Bay Area folks down to Austin to flip already purple Texas, a few more to lock Arizona solidly blue - and hey, while we're at it, get a few more out of NY and into that troublesome flippy PA? Pretty soon that electoral and senate math starts looking bad for folks depending on minority representation. Why wouldn't they want this?
Re: Wives (Score:4)
I've never understood this. People move because the place they're leaving is in some way deficient, to a place that is in some way superior, and immediately begin voting/changing things to be like the place they just left. It makes no sense.
Re: (Score:2)
This.
The leavers will be those who are a better fit for their destination. Maybe some of your companies most highly educated employees [slashdot.org]. For better or worse.
Re: (Score:2)
Their opinions on what is deficient do not necessarily match your opinions on what's superior.
Re: Wives (Score:2)
Or the idea that the place where the people came from, "sent" them. Almost like they didn't want to leave but were forced to by the local government or everyone wanted to leave but these were the lucky ones who were allowed.
The folks who say this, I think it implies more what they think about the place they themselves live in.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Do you want slavery, famines, religious wars, or whatever comforts of life this "going back" thing entails?
I remember pre-covid America a little differently than you do, apparently.
Re: (Score:2)
I loved my life pre-covid, and can't wait to get back. My life isn't "that" bad even now, but I really want to get back to the freedom to enjoy friends, meet new people out....go to all the food/music. festivals and such that we have hear year almost round during normal times.
If that is supposed to be a response to what I wrote, I don't see how your anecdote is relevant. You have the same parties, the same politicians, the same corporations, the same laws, the same social problems, the same pretty much anything you had two years ago. I fail to see what meaningful "going back" there could be on a scale of two years. Mind you, it's not that no things ever happened in history where meaningful "going back" over just two years could take place, such as in
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'd say at about 50% of yearly electricity you're going to hit a cliff.
As long as wind/solar is just cutting fuel costs for gas power plant and providing up to 100% of power, you can grow relatively painlessly ... but once you start hitting over-provisioned wind/solar for significant amounts of the year suddenly the profitability of wind/solar will take a nose dive without an increase in the subsidy level.
Re:Wives (Score:5, Insightful)
Probably more like 80% (studies have been done, this is not a WAG), when the issues of extended periods of reduced insolation and wind become an issue. Up to this point grid-scale battery deployment (the price keeps coming down) will be able to perform any leveling functions necessary at a cost well below nuclear power plants.
That last 20% will be the most difficult, but you are looking perhaps 3 decades out at that point. We will have time to develop options and select the most preferable. One possibility (not much discussed, but my favorite) is to go to 100% with wind and solar, but keep gas-fired plans in stand-by for the rare periods when solar plus wind plus cheap battery is not enough. The actual duty cycle of gas in powering the grid over time will be quite low, maybe 1-2% (this is a WAG) and can be offset with carbon capture. The gas plants needed will have been already built, so no new capital investment required, just instead of scrapping them as they are retired from regular service they placed in a maintained standby status.
Re: (Score:3)
I'm not saying the road to 80% is impossible because of lack of cheap storage, I'm saying it's expensive for reasons which have nothing to do with storage.
I'm talking about the cost increase as wind/solar starts competing against itself instead of mostly against gas power plants, when wind/solar starts becoming over-provisioned (during peak production) the savings from not fueling the gas power plant backups disappear for a significant amount of their operating life ... thus requiring higher subsidy levels
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Demand is going to rocket higher between people's southern climate heat pumps switching to resistive heating.
If you already have a heat pump why would you switch to resistive heating? Isn't the whole point of using a heat pump to lower your electrical use. Why would you increase your electrical use if you switch to solar/wind?
If you are using an open air heat pump you could always convert it to a geothermal heat pump instead of adding resistive heating to your home.
Because heat pumps pump heat (Score:2)
> If you already have a heat pump why would you switch to resistive heating? Isn't the whole point of using a heat pump to lower your electrical use.
Because heat pumps do exactly what the name implies - they pinp the heat from one place to another. In this case, taking the heat that is outside the house and moving it to inside. That doesn't work so well when there is hardly any heat outside the house, when the outdoor air temperature is below freezing.
Heat pumps are great when it's 45 outside and you wa
Re: (Score:3)
Ground-source heat pump systems can actuall
Re: (Score:2)
I have a fairly efficient heat pump, but as you mention it has to keep defrosting when it gets around freezing and the amount of electricity it requires gets pretty high. Compared to the gas boiler, it's not worth running when it's very cold out.
Re: (Score:2)
I couldn't find live data for Texas but generally speaking if it is cloudy then it is probably windy, at least at the height turbines operate at. Clouds form in low pressure fronts, which also cause wind.
Besides, you don't need a huge amount of wind, you just need plenty of turbines.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I did some back of napkin math for wood heating for the UK once ... they'd need to reforest around the entire UK to get the wood.
True, but already did the easy wins. (Score:2)
It's true 10% isn't the upper bound.
10% is what you get from using solar power in the afternoon, in sunny locations.
Using solar electric at night is a little harder.
Using it in Portland is a little harder.
Once you've done the easy wins, it gets harder and harder from there. If you wanted to model it mathematically, the exponent is negative. Growth SLOWS, not accelerates, as you approach 100% because you're trying to use it in situations it's not well suited for.
The first megawatt scale solar plants were in
Re: (Score:2)
Wow I'll take that bet!
The International Energy Agency forecast is for global wind/solar output to double in the next 5 years. Quite a difference from your prediction of 45 years.
No point quibbling, let's just wait and see which is closer.
https://www.statista.com/chart... [statista.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Anything is possible. I'm not betting either way. :)
In my experience, people tend to over-estimate how much will change with society in five years, and any estimates 50 years into the future are pretty much guesses.
I did a long paper about the energy mix about five years ago.
Five years ago, the storage problem for powering a large city through a large storm was so great that anyone who did the numbers couldn't seriously think that would ever happen. (After looking at the numbers; if you don't know the numb
Re: Wives (Score:2)
The next few years should really be the most transformative. There's already enough adoption (10%) that a large percentage growth is also a large amount of growth
Bullshit - if they DOUBLE the amount of solar and wind power, it's only 20%. Any idea what's involved in literally doubling the amount of wind and solar power - take everything that's been done under Bush'43, Obama, and Trump and do it all again, and you'll get close - that's only 20 years worth of work, to achieve 20%.
Despite the excitement in the story, we are not on the cusp of a tremendous uptick in wind/solar generation. Presidential Campaign promises aren't binding, and if examined closely typically r
Re: (Score:3)
Just a few points, manufacturing capacity in place far exceeds what was in place 30, 20 or even 10 years ago.
As long as manufacturing capacity growth is not reduced, then the annual new installations will continue to increase.
The real key to continued solar and wind build out is replacing outdated power delivery infrastructure to support moving energy across regions of the country will low levels of loss
Re: Wives (Score:2)
The summary says the energy generation doubles every 4 years, so in our lifetime,say 80 years we are looking at 2^20 times increase. My question is, will that rate of growth continue after the Earth goes incandescent? This may be what started original Big Bang.
After some thought, I found the solution. We have also been promised exponential growth in battery capacity, so we'll just store the excess energy in magical batteries that are coming.
Whoduh thunk it. (Score:2)
Breaking news: scaling up requires time.
Uhmmm... "last"??? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm working on the last 100% of my morning coffee.
Re: (Score:2)
This is an example of a problem that comes up when applying linear intuition to exponential phenomena.
It's not exponential growth, it's logistic growth. (Score:3, Informative)
This should be blatantly obvious. There is a saturation limit, and as that limit is approached, the rate of growth will asymptotically slow down.
As one of my professors when I was studying computer science in post secondary would say (with irony intended), "this is kindergarten math".
Re:It's not exponential growth, it's logistic grow (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Excess solar generation can be used to power rather large batteries to provide night-time power such as the Hornsdale Power Reserve [wikipedia.org]
I'd give that a + insightful moderation (Score:2)
Solar supply can easily go over 100% of demand, because it can be used for desalination, hydrogen generation, synthetic fuels, heat storage, pumping and other purposes where cheap energy is very valuable. It wouldn't surprise me if it goes 10x over demand.
I'd give that a + insightful moderation if I had mod points right now.
It's the same issue as the famous IBM prediction that they might need to make and sell five computers. That was approximately the result of thinking about how much computing was being d
Re: (Score:2)
Where did I suggest that simply meeting 100% of the demand was the saturation limit?
A saturation limit inherently exists for something like this if for no other reason than that there is a finite amount of solar and wind energy on the planet at any given instant to harvest in the first place.
Re: (Score:2)
Look at land use.
Also remember that these plants are on a 25-50 year cycle.
Look at roofs. Also remember that shingles are on a 20-50 year cycle.
There's lots of roof area in sunny places and they work just fine as roofs when paved with solar panels.
Also: 25-50 year lifetime is characteristic of CURRENT solar panels. But (unlike the amount of power they gather) there's no inherent limit on how long some future panel could last, and that is one of the things being researched. Two to five decades is a long
Re: (Score:2)
Have you ever spent any time in the Western US?
Finding sufficient quantities of empty land isn't a problem.
Re: (Score:2)
Discuss the difficulty of recycling "renewables" elsewhere...
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, we'll hit a saturation point. But well before that (for a pure logistic curve, halfway between time 0 and time End), you'll hit an inflection point where the accelerating upward trend ceases, and merely becomes linear.
Looking at the growth curves for installed wind and solar capacity, and taking into account that 2020 was kind of a weird year for any eco
Re: (Score:2)
I wasn't suggesting that we were... and I recognize that the first part of a logistic growth curve is all but completely indistinguishable from an exponential one.
However, it is plainly obvious that there will exist some saturation limit, even if we are nowhere near it right now. Thus, it is, and always was, a logistic growth curve, and not an exponential one, regardless of what it might look like at the moment.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
First, during day time, it is rare for both wind and solar to be non-producing. During the night it is true that late at night one can have low wind and no solar in many locations, but there's much less energy demand at night, so one doesn't need nearly as much capacity as during the day.
Second, transmission is a thing. When there's excess wind in one location or excess solar in one location, it can be used to mo
Re: (Score:2)
As of today, both solar panels and wind turbines consumes about as much CO2 for their construction, transport and installation than they will save during their lifetime electric production. It's about the same order of magnitude but can vary from somewhat good to somewhat bad. If you add batteries and other crap to make it a bit stable, you're clearly better off burning gas.
Good luck saving the planet's climate with that.
Re: (Score:2)
Grid Storage with Battery's ? doubtful I ran numbers and with the best LIB's we have at this time it would take seven supersize cargo container ships stacked to max capacity with every container full of battery's and you would be able to store power to run Tokyo Japan for only 72 hr's.
I'm not sure where you are getting these numbers from, but I'd be interested in seeing them. I'm also not sure why you think 72 hours of full power would be necessary. You aren't dealing with the Antarctic, so you'll always have some solar power in that time period.
Not to mention the relative inability of recycling those LIB's.
Th
Re: (Score:2)
I ran numbers and with the best LIB's
There's no particular reason to use one of the most expensive batteries technologies when you're talking about grid-scale storage. Lithium is good for size and weight, neither of which is important when you're just putting a ton of them in a building.
Practical Too. (Score:2)
I see a lot of Solar and some wind where I live.
1. It is because the technology is at a point where it is affordable, still it may be a little more expensive than traditional methods, but it isn't a burden anymore.
2. It is accessible. Having a field with Solar Panels, or a mountain top with a Wind Turbine for the larger grid production, is much easier to get approved vs trying to build an Air pollution creating plant in or near a residential area. So communities can have their own power without relying
Ways you can speed this up (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
there's very little wind in the North-East
And you can thank the Kennedy Clan and their ilk for that. How much donated money will we need to hire attorneys to fight them in the courts for decades?
Re: (Score:2)
Is this really a true statement? (Score:2)
The "wall" isn't until 30%-40% (Score:3, Informative)
...and it's not a "wall", it's an inflection point in one of those sigmoid ("S shaped") curves. How much intermittent power we can use will drop off. It doesn't matter how cheap something is if nobody is buying at that time.
This has been anticipated by energy-system modelling for decades. Intermittent can contribute, but it can't take over base-load electricity, which is why every numerate green activist is pro-nuclear, the only green base-load provider other than the about-maxed-out hydro.
An MIT study is quoted by David Roberts over at Vox, to the effect that it would take extremely cheap storage - capital costs around $20/kWh of capacity, or 1/8th of current prices - to turn intermittent into 7x24. Before you get down to $20, you can push up those 30-40% numbers a ways with Lithium cells and "green hydrogen"...you just can't get to all-intermittent save hydro without the power price going through the root, affecting the whole economy.
There's one out that I see. Make it a requirement that all garages that can recharge eVehicles can also power the building, upon a request from the power company, just drop that house off the grid for a few hours. (You'd be able to program your car to sell back energy until it was down to just enough to get to work and back, then refuse to sell any more.) Being able to drop a lot of houses and apartments off the grid for a few hours would really help close the gap between 90% renewables and 100%. A lot of that "$20/kWh" was to buy storage that's almost never needed except the worst hour of the worst day. So "free" storage that was already purchased for car purposes might make it work.
Re: (Score:3)
That study [cell.com] was written by scientists and engineers, not economists, so any price they can come up with is just a made-up number.
Re: (Score:3)
Hydro can be used for base load, but that's a waste. The best virtue of hydro is that it can be turned on and off very quickly -- seconds to minutes. Vs hours for coal or gas fired plants, or days for nuclear. This makes it ideal for responding to spikes in load.
I agree that nuclear (and perhaps something a little more modern like traveling wave or something recent like that) for base load, plus solar, wind and waves (with batteries for load equalization) plus hydro for load variations will bring us to 0 em
Re: (Score:2)
Vs hours for coal or gas fired plant
Natural gas power plants are almost instantaneous to start. They're essentially very large helicopter turbines hooked up to generators.
They got their start as peaking plants with coal and nuclear as base load. Then gas got so cheap they started running much more often.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
It does matter how cheap something can be made, because if something costs half as much as the next more expensive option, you can just build it to 200% capacity and not use the excess. One of the nice properties of these "intermittent" electricity sources is that they don't consume scarce resources to keep them running when they're not needed. And unlike nuclear power plants, solar and wind can almost instantly react to load swings. You can simply install ten times as many solar panels just so that you hav
Re: (Score:2)
You can simply install ten times as many solar panels just so that you have enough electricity at all times.
Zero sun (at nighttime) X ten times as many solar panels is still zero.
Re:The "wall" isn't until 30%-40% (Score:4, Informative)
The reason for overbuilding solar is to avoid the need for long term storage (summer/winter). Day/night can be solved with short term storage or with complementary electricity sources. The wind blows at night. The ideal electricity mix isn't the same everywhere. My point is that "It doesn't matter how cheap something is if nobody is buying at that time" is not true. It is not wasteful to not use electricity from solar panels if the electricity you do use ends up being cheaper overall (total cost divided by the electricity used).
Re: (Score:2)
Don't misquote me. They don't consume scarce resources to keep them running when they're not needed.
Intermittency (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, I don't see us getting past 20% marketshare for wind or solar until we have we have a cheap way to store the power for overnight usage.
Re: (Score:2)
If only there was a power storage technology that was simultaneously undergoing rapid cost decreases and capacity increases. Since no such technology exists, I guess we'll have to give up on renewables.
Oh, wait...
Re: (Score:2)
That's true, we also need a small amount of energy storage to keep the grid up, plus a little extra priced at market equilibrium to prevent blackouts.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That's only what the scientists say. But how much electrical storage (supply) is needed to cover a day of electrical demand is an economics problem, not a science problem.
Re: (Score:3)
Daylight is intermittent - plants that depend on photosynthesis can never work. Never.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
It's too bad we don't have the means of creating and improving technology. Maybe the aliens that built the pyramids and gave us refrigerators will come back.
Re: (Score:2)
Failed to talk about the important parts (Score:3, Insightful)
Most people have a really bad understanding of power. Here are some very important facts that the article ignored:
1) Most power is 'wasted'. In conversion to electricity and transmission to the use point (home/car/factory), 2/3 of the potential power is wasted. Simply moving from using "solar to create electricity to power your water heater" to "solar directly heating hot water tank" will triple the efficiency.
2) Even more wasted power applies on sight, at least during summer (during winter the 'waste' power mostly heats your home/factory/etc). Residential and Commercial waste about 1/3, industry wastes about 1/5, and gasoline cars waste about 4/5.
3) Homes only use about 15% of power, commercial uses 11%, Industry uses about 34%, and transportation uses the rest - about 40%. If we build bicycle friendly + subway cities like Copenhagen you do more for power use than switching to renewables.
4) Electricity storage is still our major issue, not only does it create waste but it also uses limited and environmentally dangerous resources. Batteries are the most important innovation in electric cars, the rest is merely incremental change.
Re: (Score:2)
Modern combined cycle gas plants can be 60% efficient or greater, with maybe 10% transmission loss to the use point, so greater than 50%.
The efficiency of photovoltaic electricity generation only matters directly to the end user as far a
Re: (Score:2)
I was not confused nor did I spew misinformation. You misunderstood what I said.
I said electrical generation and transmission. That was an average for ALL forms of ALL electrical generation - including from solar and wind.
My specific example explained how solar to electricity wastes more power than direct solar heating of water. (Most 'off grid' people use solar to heat their water tank before they add any solar electrical generation.
The information I got was from here: https://flowcharts.llnl.gov/co. [llnl.gov]
Re: (Score:2)
Nice one. Your post kind of sounds reasonable, if you don't think.
A thermal electric plant wastes two thirds of the energy it generates. A solar cell or windmill fails to capture 2/3 of the energy that's already there. There's a rather large difference.
Re: (Score:2)
is that math?? (Score:2)
I remember one time having someone explain to me that if the growth rate of the population continued it would not be long before the people on the earth out weighted the whole planet.
I statement that should give you pause , but didn't phase this particular person.
This seems the same. Just because there has been expediential growth in an industry Well, past performance is no necessarily indicative of future prospects.
Solar / Wind (Score:2)
Isn't that the company that had that massive hack recently?
Re: Not news - "Reaching for" is more weasel words (Score:4, Insightful)
And this anti-math logic is we have the annual question "Is (next year) the year of the Linux desktop?"
"Linux is reaching for the last 97% of the desktop market"
Re: (Score:2)
Anything growing at a compounded rate of nearly 18%, as U.S. wind and solar have done for the past three decades, will double in four years, then double again four years after that, then again four years after that, and so on
Got it. Double to 20% in 4 years.
then double again four years after that
Ok. 40% in 8.
then again four years after that
Got it. 80% in 12...
and so on
160% in 16 years? Hmmm.
Re: (Score:2)
You're correct. Adoption of new technology is typically super-exponential in the middle and then saturates. Following the typical pattern, 90% adoption would be sooner than the summary's simple math suggests, and 100% later.
Re: (Score:2)
Desktop users.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, based on the sales of big monitors, I have to assume anyone working remotely... But hardly anyone does anymore, right?
In 2020, 275 million desktops were sold - that does not include laptop sales.
You should ask why (Score:3)
The reason is that over the last year or so Wind and Solar are actually cheaper ( with no subsidies) than carbon based energy now. Thats whats driving it. Business only picks a solution when it helps the bottom line. Expect that 18% annual rate to accelerate. Now that it makes good business sense everyone will embrace it.
Re:You should ask why (Score:4, Insightful)
Wind and solar may be cheaper than building gas or coal power plants, but only so many old plants retire each year. It is much harder to economically justify shutting down existing plants.
We need to realize that there is no "American atmosphere". We are dealing with a global problem. New wind and solar capacity should go to the developing world, where all growth in emissions is occurring. Brand new coal-burning powerplants are under construction in India, Indonesia, and Africa. Once built, they will spew gigatons of CO2 for a century. Stopping those plants and replacing them with wind and solar should be our top priority. Replacing gas turbines in America is much less important.
Re: (Score:2)
They're called "stranded assets".
In many cases it's cheaper to build new solar and wind plants than to buy fossil fuel for existing coal plants. This is math that everyone understands. Abandon the old plant. It's too expensive to operate.
Re: (Score:3)
"natural gas (half the emissions of coal)"
Unburnt natural gas is a very strong greenhouse gas. All you need is a few percent leakage, either from the distribution system or uncapped wells to wipe out the advantage. There is much of that both here (https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/us-millions-of-abandoned-oil-wells-are-leaking-methane-a-climate-menace/ar-BB15z8pe) and abroad (https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2020/10/14/number-global-methane-hot-spots-has-soared-this-year-despite-econo
Re: (Score:2)
Yes. China has been abandoning planned new coal plants faster than anyone else.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, if we can stall demand growth, we can "buy time" for some of this tech to mature.
The single biggest demand on our grid is HVAC.
Current building practices produce horribly energy inefficient buildings.
There are ways to build/retrofit that result in HVAC power consumption being slashed to a micro-fraction of "code built".
Even if we only slashed consumption in HALF, you're talking about shaving 20-30% off national power consumption.
Modern construction/retrofit techniques can reduce consumption by up
Re: (Score:2)
https://www.epa.gov/energy/electricity-customers>Not really. Industrial use accounts for around 1/4 of electrical consumption, and very little of that is HVAC. Residential and Commercial account for almost all of the rest, and only about 1/4 of the electricity consumption of each those sectors is HVAC. HVAC electricity use is at most maybe 20% of the total generated. (Note however, that a lot of the energy consumption for the H in HVAC is gas, not electr