Site logo

Prometheus 6

All respect and no restraint

That's what happens when you stop dragging your heels

Study: Solar power is cheaper than nuclear
July 27, 2010 by Osha Davidson

The Holy Grail of the solar industry — reaching grid parity — may no longer be a distant dream. Solar may have already reached that point, at least when compared to nuclear power, according to a new study by two researchers at Duke University.

It’s no secret that the cost of producing photovoltaic cells (PV) has been dropping for years. A PV system today costs just 50 percent of what it did in 1998. Breakthroughs in technology and manufacturing combined with an increase in demand and production have caused the price of solar power to decline steadily. At the same time, estimated costs for building new nuclear power plants have ballooned.

The result of these trends: “In the past year, the lines have crossed in North Carolina,” say study authors John Blackburn and Sam Cunningham. “Electricity from new solar installations is now cheaper than electricity from proposed new nuclear plants.”

If the data analysis is correct, the pricing would represent the “Historic Crossover” claimed in the study’s title.

Two factors not stressed in the study bolster the case for solar even more:

1) North Carolina is not a “sun-rich” state. The savings found in North Carolina are likely to be even greater for states with more sunshine –Arizona, southern California, Colorado, New Mexico, west Texas, Nevada and Utah.

2) The data include only PV-generated electricity, without factoring in what is likely the most encouraging development in solar technology: concentrating solar power (CSP). CSP promises utility scale production and solar thermal storage, making electrical generation practical for at least six hours after sunset.

Let's see if somebody tries to change this rule

The President in office at the time gets the credit.

And speaking of wind power

 

Robert Fri at Need to Know:

When bad things happen to good windmills

July 29th, 2010

Ask any proponent of alternative energy and you’ll learn that windmills are good. No pollution, no climate change, no oil, free fuel. Who could complain?

Lamar Alexander, for one. He’s the senior senator from Tennessee and he wants no part of windmills in his revered Smoky Mountains. The Kennedy clan and their friends on Cape Cod, for another. They fought the offshore Cape Wind project for years, finally losing but not without a protracted fight. And Alexander and Kennedy are not alone. Many wind energy projects have attracted passionate opposition from community groups that formed spontaneously when a new project loomed. It’s a puzzle that Roopali Phadke, an assistant professor at Macalester College in St. Paul, studies for a living. Her research into the nature of these groups has produced findings that are both surprising and a bit disturbing.

 

Hmph. They got no beef with

Hmph. They got no beef with oil wells and refineries...

This site best viewed with a jaundiced eye