Report highlights enormous potential and discusses pathways toward affordable solar energy.
Melissa Abraham | MIT Energy Initiative
Solar
energy holds the best potential for meeting humanity’s future long-term
energy needs while cutting greenhouse gas emissions — but to realize
this potential will require increased emphasis on developing lower-cost
technologies and more effective deployment policy, says a comprehensive
new study, titled “The Future of Solar Energy,” released today by the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI).
“Our
objective has been to assess solar energy’s current and potential
competitive position and to identify changes in U.S. government policies
that could more efficiently and effectively support its massive
deployment over the long term, which we view as necessary,” says MITEI
Director Robert Armstrong, the Chevron Professor in Chemical Engineering at MIT.
The
study’s chair, Richard Schmalensee, the Howard W. Johnson Professor
Emeritus of Economics and Management at the MIT Sloan School of
Management, adds, “What the study shows is that our focus needs to shift
toward new technologies and policies that have the potential to make
solar a compelling economic option.”
The study group is presenting its findings to lawmakers and senior administration officials this week in Washington. “The
Future of Solar Energy” reflects on the technical, commercial, and
policy dimensions of solar energy today and makes recommendations to
policymakers regarding more effective federal and state support for
research and development, technology demonstration, and solar
deployment.
Among its major themes is the need to prepare our
electricity systems, both technically and from a regulatory standpoint,
for very large-scale deployment of solar generation — which tends to
vary unpredictably throughout the day. To this end, the study emphasizes
the need for federal research and development support to advance
low-cost, large-scale electricity storage technologies.
The
analysis finds that today’s federal and state subsidy programs designed
to encourage investment in solar systems should be reconsidered, to
increase their cost-effectiveness, with greater emphasis on rewarding
production of solar energy. The group also recommends that state
renewable portfolio standards, which are designed to increase generation
of electricity from renewable resources, be brought under a unified
national program that would reduce the cost of meeting set mandates by
allowing unrestricted interstate trading of credits.
The study
concludes by pointing to the urgent need for an ambitious and innovative
approach to technology development, with federal research and
development investment focused on new technologies and systems with the
potential to deliver transformative system cost reductions. The
MIT “Future of …” studies are a series of multidisciplinary reports that
examine the role various energy sources could play in meeting future
energy demand under carbon dioxide emissions constraints. These
comprehensive reports are written by multidisciplinary teams of MIT
researchers. The research is informed by an external advisory committee.
http://theenergycollective.com/energyatmit/2224726/mitei-releases-report-future-solar-energy
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