The momentum of the solar energy transition - eviltoast

Due to technological trajectories set in motion by past policy, a global irreversible solar tipping point may have passed where solar energy gradually comes to dominate global electricity markets, without any further climate policies

    • Antitoxic9087@slrpnk.net
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      1 year ago

      I mean I understand this is modeling a pathway with no further climate policy, but still wind being second cheapest option should gain more share.

      • shastaxc@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I think the assumption is that since they are large and but the first most cost efficient, it doesn’t make sense to increase its share. Why not just put more solar instead?

        • Antitoxic9087@slrpnk.net
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          1 year ago

          I see from this paper that compared with Way et al. (2022), they introduced “learning in operational costs, rather than only in CAPEX”, which benefits solar and offshore wind, also “solar power and wind energy see a higher learning rate than previous model versions”. So very surprised wind not gaining more.

          It is difficult to compare the results of Way et al. (2022) and this paper directly since in the former final and usable energy were reported and here it is electricity that is reported in the text, although from their relative share (both across time and wind vs solar at a given time), the conditions for solar is probably more favorable and wind growth is more constrained in this paper.

          (Note: if I recalled correctly, Way et al. were the first to develop this system dynamics model that made learning rates endogenous feedback processes.)

    • keepthepace@slrpnk.net
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      1 year ago

      Politics mostly. It would be a solution, but it requires building a ton and building them fast. We can build nuclear power plants in a few years, but it usually takes a decade to work through the legal hassles opponents will put through. When factored in, not worth it anymore. And I am really angry at them because we could already be in a post-fossil fuel without this misguided pseudo-environmentalism.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Take a look at the cost overruns for Plant Vogtle 3 and 4 and it’ll answer your question.

    • Addition@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I like nuclear a lot too, but it does have its drawbacks:

      1. Expensive. Plants are expensive to build and maintain. They also take like 5-10 years to build from scratch.

      2. Water intensive. In the coming century water is going to a really hot commodity as water reserves dwindle. Having a power source that relies on lots of water might not be a good idea.

      3. Fuel sources. Not about what’s fueling it but where is coming from. Uranium is only found in certain deposits and if your country either doesn’t have a source in house then they need to have political clout and money to obtain it. Everyone likes to point to France as a nuclear powered country but where did they get their uranium? Niger. The same Niger that just had an anti-french coup, cutting off their supply.

      Maybe future tech like SMRs will make it more viable but for now the solar/geothermal/wind route will be a much quicker and easier replacement for fossil fuels.

      • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        Niger supplied 20% of Frances uranium over the last ten years. The coup is not a threat to Frances electricity supply at all as France can buy urnanium ore from others countries with ease. The problem is that Russia has nearly half of the global uranium enrichment capacity and we all have seen that Russia should not be trusted when it comes to energy security.

      • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        Regarding scarce uranium, if more money was poured into perfecting a thorium based molten salt design, we would have enough readily available fuel to power the world for over a thousand years, as Thorium deposits are quite common.

        However I’m not hopeful that Nuclear will become a significant power source in any reasonable timeframe, at least in america, due to the massive amount of red tape making building them slow and costly. Though I hope I’m wrong about that.

      • keepthepace@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago
        1. Count per kWh. Countries like France who managed to standardize models get cheap costs.
        2. Air cooling is a possibility and water availability not a problem. If water becomes scarce or warm to the point where we can’t warm a percent of a stream up a few degrees, we will have much more serious problems than electricity.
        3. France started mining uranium locally. We stopped because Niger was cheaper and with less labor rights. But blockade France and the uranium mines can get reopened.
      • Eheran@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago
        1. So is solar and wind if you take everything into account. Most importantly storage to make it viable for night time use. Let alone overcast days with no wind. Unless you have that storage, you need to have parallel capacity of some other power plant to make up for that. Which is, the more wind/solar there is, used less and less. But still costs the same. Storage big enough to get over winter is way to expensive. And even with storage you need excess capacity to actually fill that storage.
        2. There is no inherent need to use water, air cooling is possible too, but costs more. The water is also not “wasted”, so unless all the mayor rivers etc. dry up there is no issue.
        3. The least of all issues. Uranium can be found in lots of places, including Germany and the USA. We can also use thorium, from which we have even more.
        • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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          1 year ago

          For 1. grid size matters a lot. It is always sunny and/or windy somewhwere, so if you can transport the electricity with a good enough grid you can cut down on storage. In the EU the lowest share of renewables on a single day was 23% of electricity production of what over the entire year was 37.6%. 8.3% of total production on the worst day was from solar and wind the rest mainly hydro and biomass. Btw that was 06/12/2022.

          Point is that seasonal electricty storage for renewables grid is absolutly not needed and for a continetal sized grid you mostly run to about a days worth of storage and some smart grid management. We also already have hydro power reservoirs, which have some truely massive storage capacity, if used not for baseload, but for dispatch.

          • Eheran@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago
            1. You still need the massive excess capacity then. Costs x2 or x3 are a big change. Without seasonal storage you need a global grid as well as that massive excess capacity. That not only costs extremely much (this was the argument against nuclear) but would also be impossible given the unstable relations around the world, let alone terrorists who only need to cut “one line” to remove power from all of Europe. Not going to happen.

            Hydrostorage is absolutely nothing and can not be significantly increased, just like hydro power. Take a calculator and see how long it lasts. World wide it’s 180 GW of power and 1.6 TWh energy, as per wiki. The USA need over 4000 TWh yearly, they empty the whole world capacity of hydro storage from 100 to 0% in 3 hours. Just the USA alone.

            • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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              1 year ago

              That was exactly my point, you do not need a global grid for this to work a continent sized one already does a great job. That was why I used the EU as an example. As for seasonal storage the worst month last year had 42.8% renewables, which was March, the best was February so a month earlier with 60.0%. The average was 49.7%. So we are talking 20% up or down. That is also true when you just look at wind and solar. Average was 47.15GWh and the worst month was 40.97GWh and the best 59.00GWh. So again fairly even distribution over the entire year. So no need for seasonal storage, unless you have something super cheap.

              That is real world data and not some crazy stuff. You basicly just have to overbuilt by 50% and add a days worth of storage to the EU grid to work and the ability to move around electricity.

              Also I am talking about hydro power, which per wiki only makes up 16% of global generation. That has storage capabilities built in current reservoir power plants. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroelectricity#Properties

                • MrMakabar@slrpnk.net
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                  1 year ago

                  Right now Sweden and Norway have 118GWh of hydro storage and there is more in other EU countries. That alone is enough to power the EU for two weeks or so. But even that is not entirly needed as Europe is large and diverse enough geographically to have different weather in different countries. So power can still be moved. Even on the worst day of last year wind and solar were still able to produce 8.5% of the EUs electricity production so 37% of average levels.

    • silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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      1 year ago

      Cost mostly. It’s really expensive, enough so that the first ~80% of the shift off fossil fuels is going to happen using solar + wind + storage.

      To make sense for the last 20%, it’s going to need to come down in price enough to beat the emerging longer-duration storage technologies. Not at all clear to me that it can do that.

    • LilNaib@slrpnk.net
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      1 year ago

      I think you’re best suited to answer your own question. Since you’re the one who wants to build nuclear, why don’t you do it?

      If the answer is expertise, no problem, just hire people.

      If the answer is money, just band together with others. Online discussions always have tons of people who want the same thing you do – you can pool your resources.

    • Uranium3006@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      big oil kneecapped it and enviromentalists still think they’re thinly veiled bomb factories. you can tell because you substitute “thorium” for “nuclear” and favorability shoots up way more than you’d expect taking into account non-hysteria reasons