Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Scott Burbidge's avatar

Bravo!! That explanation was so concise and clear that my 89 yr old mother would "get it".

It makes me ill when I hear high placed politicians (& the ultimate snake oil man - Al Gore) spout off about how cheap wind/solar has become. Al Gore knows better but I really don't think these politicians truly understand the ramifications of the decisions they are making.

Please send this to all elected representatives in all the developed economies - before they leave us all in the dark with their plans to lead us into the enviro light.

p.s. the car/roller-coaster analogy was superb. A short YouTube video on it would race around the world in short order.

Expand full comment
Aurelien Windenberger's avatar

Hi PEP, your article is well laid out and I won’t argue with your assessment that renewables need backup, that’s absolutely the case. I think that you weaken your argument for anyone knowledgeable when you fail to combine the output of both wind and solar when running your calculations on annual needs for batteries in a hypothetical renewable only grid. While wind production declines in the summer in Texas, solar tends to be very strong, so that the combination of the two creates a much more balanced production curve. The amount of batteries needed is still high, but nowhere near your figure.

This is particularly true if we stop looking at a renewables only scenario. The last 5% is what really sends costs to the moon, so I for one would be happy with the mostly renewable grid which uses natural gas turbines for those periods when you need an extra boost.

Trying to reach 100% is what creates high cost renewables, but it’s no reason to not go as far as we can in a cost effective way.

Expand full comment
20 more comments...

No posts