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Solar Could Beat Coal to Become the Cheapest Power on Earth

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Boney

Banned
There was a similar report last year as to how rapidly the energy efficieny is advancing.

It still needs to be able to overcome oil and mining lobbies and be able to deliver green energy for all.
 

XOMTOR

Member
Same thing in Europe. Though they recently reduced the Chinese tariffs by a few percent. Meh.

Nice isn't it? Protectionism at its finest. Here in Canada, four domestic manufacturers complained to the government and of course, being in the pockets of large corporations, they sided with them. The duty rates range from 9% upwards to 281% depending on the import (that 9% one is on a Chinese manufacturer that has set up a plant here in Ontario so they get a bit of a break). The next lowest rate is 50%.
 

Iksenpets

Banned
I find it funny that we're so disproportionately 'worried' about coal miners. They're a relatively marginal group compared to, say, truck drivers; And that profession is about to get automated up the ass over the next 5-10 years.

Truck drivers are totally going to be the new coal miners in ten years. Its collapse as a blue collar profession is going to be timed perfectly with the time when coal's death throes should be sputtering out.

Guess we better subsidize coal! Can't let those Americans lose their job, right?

What if we all just agree that the trendy new thing is buying coal art to put in your home. Then they can preserve their lifestyle of suffering endlessly in mine shafts and everyone else gets to have a trendy lump of coal on their mantle.
 

ReaperXL7

Member
I find it funny that we're so disproportionately 'worried' about coal miners. They're a relatively marginal group compared to, say, truck drivers; And that profession is about to get automated up the ass over the next 5-10 years.

I used Coal plants as an example because it's the industry that's directly effected by the topic in the OP. I still think a major factor in any of these fields to give the people being displaced tangible, reliable belief that your going to ensure that they can transition into the field that is replacing their livelihoods without spending huge portions of their time in collage and can continue to make livable wages while learning.
 
I don't honestly understand the argument in favour of coal compared to, say, nuclear. You need some non-solar energy because energy production and demand have to largely meet at the same time. We can't just store a load of energy up in the summer to use in the winter (or even in the day to use at night, in a lot of cases). But why coal? I guess it must be cheaper, because I can't think of any way in which it's better than nuclear.
 

sans_pants

avec_pénis
I don't honestly understand the argument in favour of coal compared to, say, nuclear. You need some non-solar energy because energy production and demand have to largely meet at the same time. We can't just store a load of energy up in the summer to use in the winter (or even in the day to use at night, in a lot of cases). But why coal? I guess it must be cheaper, because I can't think of any way in which it's better than nuclear.

People are afraid of nuclear but also it is prohibitively expensive to build new plants
 
People are afraid of nuclear but also it is prohibitively expensive to build new plants

But surely it's cheaper over the lifetime of the energy generation? The newest designs are so efficient (and help clean up the "dirt" from the older ones!) that it must make back its money, even if you don't account for the environmental cost of carbon plants.
 

E-Cat

Member
I used Coal plants as an example because it's the industry that's directly effected by the topic in the OP. I still think a major factor in any of these fields to give the people being displaced tangible, reliable belief that your going to ensure that they can transition into the field that is replacing their livelihoods without spending huge portions of their time in collage and can continue to make livable wages while learning.
Sure. But clearly they nor the American people want a sustainable transition, instead choosing to cling onto dying paradigms.
 

Akuun

Looking for meaning in GAF
I really hope China succeeds with their bid to replace coal with solar a.s.a.p. Not sure if it would solve pollution problems in places like Beijing, but I guess it is a must for them for many other reasons.
It would be pretty funny if China ends up bringing the world into clean energy while the US becomes the new butt of smog and gas mask jokes.
 

Aureon

Please do not let me serve on a jury. I am actually a crazy person.
Out of curiousity, what are the prices you are being quoted? Rough ballpark figure. :)

I've been quoted ~10k€ for a 6kW over my home, all inclusive, 20y warranty.

If you can self-consume a decent portion of it, it's already convenient, even before including the fact that i can tax write-off 50% of it.
 
You still need a lot of electricity of produce solar panel, which has limited life span. So unless you use nuclear power to generate the electricity, you still produce pollution in the production of the solar panels.
 

4Tran

Member
It would be pretty funny if China ends up bringing the world into clean energy while the US becomes the new butt of smog and gas mask jokes.
There's nothing really funny about that. Despite all the bad press over pollution, China has been on the forefront of clean energy development for a long time now. Environmental problems are taken very seriously by the federal government, and since they're not a democracy, the government can simply impose whatever measures they see fit. It's also a big reason why China is expected to vastly increase their nuclear energy capacity in the near future as well.

You still need a lot of electricity of produce solar panel, which has limited life span. So unless you use nuclear power to generate the electricity, you still produce pollution in the production of the solar panels.
Most of the solar panel production in the world exists in China, and that's pretty much exactly what they plan to do. And really, anything that cuts down on the number of coal powerplants is a big boon.

I don't honestly understand the argument in favour of coal compared to, say, nuclear. You need some non-solar energy because energy production and demand have to largely meet at the same time. We can't just store a load of energy up in the summer to use in the winter (or even in the day to use at night, in a lot of cases). But why coal? I guess it must be cheaper, because I can't think of any way in which it's better than nuclear.
There are communities built around coal mines, and if the mines are shut down, these communities are dead. That's why coal tends to be a bigger deal in democratic countries.
 

ReaperXL7

Member
Sure. But clearly they nor the American people want a sustainable transition, instead choosing to cling onto dying paradigms.

It's easier to believe (even if misguided) that someone can save what you already have then it is to believe that the government is going to push feasible transition solutions that won't require a collage degree.

You have to come to them with the a solid, easily communicated plan in motion at the very least, not pie in the sky maybes and what ifs when they have families to support.
 
We've got 11.50GW of solar installed already, overall Solar generates about 3% of our total electricity consumption. Which is very impressive considering it was pretty much nothing before 2011.

If your interested this site is great for giving decent estimates on solar power generation:
https://www.solar.sheffield.ac.uk/pvlive/

Just a joke of course ;) I've definitely seen a lot of solar panels in my time in the UK and Ireland, seems like wind power would be a better source of power generation for you. Although I've heard those aren't as effective.
 

Hesemonni

Banned
Meanwhile-in-finland_o_146294.jpg
 

Xe4

Banned
Solar has become cheaper than most sources of coal as of this year. However, it is not the cheapest energy source. Natural gas still reigns as cheapest, with hydroelectric and wind (not so) close behind.
http://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/assumptions/pdf/table_8.2.pdf

Coal has been a pretty shit source of energy for a while, it's just becoming more and more apparent every year. Solar and wind are going to continue to drop (though not at the rate they were), and coal is going to become more and more expensive.

It's easier to believe (even if misguided) that someone can save what you already have then it is to believe that the government is going to push feasible transition solutions that won't require a collage degree.

You have to come to them with the a solid, easily communicated plan in motion at the very least, not pie in the sky maybes and what ifs when they have families to support.

Sure, but they have to meet half way. Voting for Trump is not meeting half way, though as far as job security goes, I can at least understand why they did so. They need to be transitioning yesterday, and the longer they put off the inevitable, the harder it is going to be.

Solar and wind aren't the ones stealing the jobs anyhow, they just get the blame. The guys who are really killing coal are the natural gas industry.
 

mckmas8808

Mckmaster uses MasterCard to buy Slave drives
You still need a lot of electricity of produce solar panel, which has limited life span. So unless you use nuclear power to generate the electricity, you still produce pollution in the production of the solar panels.

And yet this is still better than no solar panels.
 
But surely it's cheaper over the lifetime of the energy generation? The newest designs are so efficient (and help clean up the "dirt" from the older ones!) that it must make back its money, even if you don't account for the environmental cost of carbon plants.

Fear and ignorance trumps common sense, we saw that enought last year.

Ideally everyone would be on a renewables/fission mix until we finally get fusion.
 

mrklaw

MrArseFace
You are still killing their community and destroying their real estate value when you target individual retraining. They will still vote Republican, still vote for coal, still be angry. "Retraining" programs will not help progressive politics.

Minimum Income would have...

Just fuck em over and shut down entire towns leaving generations shattered. Worked for thatcher in the 80's in the UK
 

GuyKazama

Member
What is the problem here with clean coal technology? I haven't researched it much, but it looks very good from what I've read.
 

E-Cat

Member
You still need a lot of electricity of produce solar panel, which has limited life span. So unless you use nuclear power to generate the electricity, you still produce pollution in the production of the solar panels.
What's your point? The net benefit is still positive.
 

zethren

Banned
What is the problem here with clean coal technology? I haven't researched it much, but it looks very good from what I've read.

Because clean coal still isn't actually clean. Coal extraction is also not always good for the environment in and of itself.

Nor is it sustainable in the long term. Solar energy technology will always be sustainable and relevant for as long as humans live on a planet with a sun.
 

tuxfool

Banned
What is the problem here with clean coal technology? I haven't researched it much, but it looks very good from what I've read.

The problem is that Clean Coal is an oxymoron.

If the things you read said it was good, stop reading them, they're almost certainly bullshit.
 

Neo C.

Member
But surely it's cheaper over the lifetime of the energy generation? The newest designs are so efficient (and help clean up the "dirt" from the older ones!) that it must make back its money, even if you don't account for the environmental cost of carbon plants.

Not with the highly increased precautionary measures of the newer ones.

It doesn't really matter in the long run though, wind and solar energy will be the cheapest hands down, and with the upcoming big battery storage, the future of the energy grid will be much different than we have now. Most people can't image how the world will look like when energy becomes even cheaper.

Brandson said:
Solar is on a good trajectory. It's batteries, particularly large-scale ones, that are holding it back.
It's still a problem now, but battery production will get a huge boost in the next few years. Several big companies want to upscale their production big time.
 

E-Cat

Member
What is the problem here with clean coal technology? I haven't researched it much, but it looks very good from what I've read.
'Clean coal' is an oxymoron. Ultimately, you're still digging up carbon and releasing it into the circulation one way or another. Moreover, as pointed out in the OP, solar is becoming more economically viable. We've coupled the price of energy to the ever-decreasing price of technology, making renewable energies, namely solar and win, *deflationary* to energy prices for the first time! Given that we have to make the transition anyway, why not make it as soon possible?
 
Not with the highly increased precautionary measures of the newer ones.

It doesn't really matter in the long run though, wind and solar energy will be the cheapest hands down, and with the upcoming big battery storage, the future of the energy grid will be much different than we have now. Most people can't image how the world will look like when energy becomes even cheaper.

The future is indeed micro grids.
 
What's your point? The net benefit is still positive.

My point is your have to include the pollution cost during production and panel life span to give a fair assessment of solar panel's impact to the world.

As an side note I have never understand why roof solar panel is not a dealer option for larger off road SUV. You see people rig solar panel on their RV and make shift camper all the time but nobody has offered an OEM option. I have never read an article to explain why that is.
 

Craft

Member
Just a joke of course ;) I've definitely seen a lot of solar panels in my time in the UK and Ireland, seems like wind power would be a better source of power generation for you. Although I've heard those aren't as effective.

The UK currently has about 16GW of wind power installed.
There is an insane amount (40GW) of wind turbines planned for the UK.
The Capacity factor for wind is only about 30% though, and there will be times when the amount generated will be so high we'll just have to throw the excess away.
Overall if everything planned right now gets build I reckon we would be getting about 30-40% of or electricity from wind.
If your interested this site maps all renewable power sources in the UK.
http://www.renewables-map.co.uk/renewable energy.asp?Status=1
 
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