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- Signposts to a Clean-Energy Future: Two New Reports Shine a Light on Potential High-Growth Pathways for the U.S.
- Our New 'Greatest Generation' Opportunity
- Cafe Musings (or How Clean Tech is Becoming Ubiquitous)
- Five Years In, A Hybrid Owner Looks Back — and Ahead
- The Future Ain't What Is Used to Be
- Federal Clean-Tech Policy is Theater of the Absurd
- Five Words for the New Year: 'Wait for the Next Administration'
- Surf's Up: Catching the Next Green Innovation Wave
- Clean Tech's Future (and Present): A Battle of Mindsets
- Bridging the Clean-Tech Developing-World Divide
- A New Bold, Bright Era for Solar
- Clean Energy: It’s All About Scale
- In the Mainstream, but Still Some Bumpy Rocks
- Clean Tech and the Art of Long-Term Thinking
- Biofuels Market Breakthrough Opens Way to Cellulosic Fuels Revolution
- The TXU Deal: Twists, Turns and a Potential Clean-Tech Tipping Point
- Clean Energy Markets: Managing High-Tech Growth
- The Paradox of 'Climate Profiteers'
- Clean Technology’s Coming-Out Party
- The Democrats' Clean-Energy Mandate
- At New Resource Bank, Money Talks ... Green
- The New Energy Companies
- Community Renewable Energy Is Just Around the Corner
- Navigating the Ethanol “Maize”
Signposts to a Clean-Energy Future: Two New Reports Shine a Light on Potential High-Growth Pathways for the U.S.
Ron Pernick
Wind power is the largest emerging clean-energy source on the
planet. It is starting to reach significant penetration in an
increasing number of markets, representing approximately 20 percent
of Denmark’s total electricity generation, 10 percent of Spain’s,
and more than 7 percent of Germany’s. In the U.S., Iowa and
Minnesota now get approximately 5 percent of their electricity from
the wind, New Mexico around 4 percent, and Oregon approximately 3.5
percent. Even more remarkable, wind represented 30 percent of new
electricity generating capacity installed in the U.S. in 2007.
Solar power, which still lags significantly behind wind as a percent
of total electricity generation and new installations, is attracting
investors, governments, utilities, and others for its potential to
scale like earlier high-tech industries (think computer chips and
cell phones). Germany, which dominates the world in solar
deployment, now gets around six tenths of one percent of its
electricity from the sun. In the U.S., the number is closer to just
one tenth of one percent.
Against the backdrop of RPS (renewable portfolio standard)
requirements, emerging carbon regulations, and energy supply
challenges, a range of stakeholders are now asking: What would it
take for solar and wind to both contribute significantly to U.S.
electricity generation? Two recently published reports (one written
by Clean Edge), outline how these two emerging energy sectors
combined could provide up to 30 percent of U.S. electricity
generation sometime between 2025 and 2030. Both reports highlight
steps that need to be taken to make such targets a reality.
On the wind front, a Department of Energy (DOE) report, entitled
20
Percent Wind Energy by 2030, identifies requirements to
achieve
the
goal of 20 percent wind by 2030, including reducing the cost of wind
technologies, citing new transmission infrastructure, and enhancing
domestic manufacturing capability.
The report presents an in-depth analysis of the potential for wind
in the U.S. and outlines a potential scenario to boost wind electric
generation from its current production of 16.8 gigawatts (GW) to 304
GW by 2030.
The analysis concludes that:
- Annual installations need to increase more than threefold.
Achieving 20 percent wind will require the number of annual turbine
installations to increase from approximately 2000 in 2006 to almost
7000 in 2017.
- Costs of integrating intermittent wind power into the grid are
modest. 20 percent wind can be reliably integrated into the grid for
less than 0.5 cents per kWh.
- No material constraints currently exist. Although demand for
copper, fiberglass and other raw materials will increase, achieving
20 percent wind is not limited by the availability of raw materials.
- Transmission challenges need to be addressed. Issues related to
siting and cost allocation of new transmission lines to access the
Nation’s best wind resources will need to be resolved in order to
achieve 20 percent wind.
Another study written by my firm, Clean Edge, along with green-
economy nonprofit Co-op America, makes the case that solar power is
emerging as a cost-effective hedge against fossil fuels and is
likely to reach cost parity with retail-electricity rates in most
regions of the U.S. in less than a decade. The Utility Solar
Assessment (USA) Study provides a comprehensive roadmap for
utilities, solar companies, and regulators to reach 10 percent solar
in the U.S. by 2025. Action items outlined in the report include:
- For utilities: Take advantage of the unique value of solar for
peak generation and alleviating grid congestion; implement solar as
part of the build-out of the smart grid; and adapt to new market
realities with new business models.
- For solar companies: Bring installed solar systems costs to $3 per
peak watt or less by 2018; streamline installations; and make solar
a truly plug-and-play technology.
- For regulators and policy makers: Pass a long-term extension of
investment and production tax credits for solar and other
renewables; establish open standards for solar interconnection; and
give utilities the ability to "rate-base" solar.
According to our research, solar power is beginning to reach cost
parity with conventional energy sources. As solar prices decline and
the capital and fuel costs for coal, natural gas, and nuclear plants
rise, the U.S. will reach a crossover point by around 2015. Just
look at the numbers, installed solar PV prices are projected to
decline from an average $5.50-$7.00 peak watt (15-32 cents kWh)
today to $3.02-$3.82 peak watt (8-18 cents kWh) in 2015.
Solar power also offers a number of other advantages over
conventional energy sources. Among them, the ability to deliver
energy at or near the point of use, zero fuel costs, minimal
maintenance requirements and zero carbon-based source emissions.
Both of these reports reflect an important new reality: Solar and
wind are capable of providing an increasingly significant portion of
the U.S.’s total electricity generation needs. Pair them with
enhanced transmission lines, the smart grid, and conservation and
efficiency, and we could transform utility markets in the U.S. and
abroad.
"To dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance our
energy security, clean power generation at the gigawatt-scale will
be necessary, and will require us to take a comprehensive
approach...," explains Andy Karsner, DOE Assistant Secretary of
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy for the U.S. Department of
Energy.
We couldn’t agree more. The future of solar and wind lies in their
massive build-out – and will require the active participation of
utilities, regulators, and companies. The two reports outlined in
this column provide important pathways to make this vision a
reality.
-------
Ron Pernick is co-founder and managing director of Clean Edge, Inc.,
coauthor of The Clean Tech Revolution, and Sustainability
Fellow at Portland State University's School of Business.