When radio shock jock Alan Jones got the cost of wind energy so horribly wrong in
front of a million or so viewers on ABC TV last month, he did more than
misplace a decimal point. He repeated an often-made misunderstanding
about the costs of energy, and why renewables are already better value
than fossil fuels. Jones, appearing on ABC TV’s Q&A program, claimed that wind
energy cost $1,500 a kWh, as opposed to coal which he put at $75/kWh. He
had his numbers terribly confused, mixing up kilowatt-hours with megawatt-hours, repeating an error first made in The Australian that lifted the cost of wind energy tenfold.
Jones admitted his error,
but he remained unbowed on his view of wind energy and renewables in
general. Like the Coalition government, its advisors, and other
opponents of renewable energy, including elements of the Murdoch media,
Jones is convinced that renewable energy will cause overall consumer
costs to soar. But he is wrong about that too.
Citigroup has published a detailed analysis of the costs of various
energy sources, and it concludes that if all the costs of generation are
included (known as the levelized cost of energy), then renewables turn
out to be cheaper than fossil fuels and a “benefit rather than a cost to
society.” That gap, and that benefit, will widen significantly in coming years,
particularly in the time-frames that the world needs to act on climate
change and transition the global energy systems from coal and gas to
clean energy sources such as wind and solar.
Capital costs are often cited by the promoters of fossil fuels as
evidence that coal and gas are, and will, remain cheaper than renewable
energy sources such as wind and gas. But this focuses on the short-term only – a trap repeated by
opponents of climate action and clean energy, who focus on the upfront
costs of policies. This was the same argument used by the Abbott
government when trying (and succeeding) in cutting the renewable energy
target.
It is the same argument used by Abbott in panning Labor’s 50 per cent
renewable energy target, when it plucked an $85 billion cost out of the
air, and in responding to critics of its weak emissions reduction
target of 26 per cent cuts by 2030 (when it plucked a figure of $600
billion for robust action).
As the Guardian has reported, the
Abbott government’s own modelling shows little difference between
ambitious and weak targets. That’s because the benefits of action over
time usually offset the initial cost.
The same can be said of the cost of energy. In its
publication, Energy Darwinism II, Why a Low Carbon Future Doesn’t Have
to Cost the Earth, Citigroup used this graph below to illustrate how the
upfront capital cost of wind and solar technology are much higher than
that of coal and gas, for instance.
Indeed, the capital cost of wind and solar – for the equipment,
account for around 60 per cent of their total costs. Half of the
remainder comes in financing, and this is falling rapidly as new vehicles such as YieldCos bring down the cost of debt and equity. On other hand, fuel costs can account for 80 per cent of the cost of
gas-fired generation, and more than half the cost of coal. And gas costs
vary dramatically, from $US3 a unit in the US, to $US8 a unit in Europe
(and now in Australia), to up to $US15 a unit in importing countries
such as Japan.
Citigroup says it is “dangerous” to rely on assumptions of capital
expenditure when the pace of change in an industry is so rapid, and the
rate of evolution so fast. “Examining capex on a standalone basis runs
the risk of overstating the cost of renewables, and understating the
total cost of conventional generation technologies,” Citigroup noted.
So, how do these technologies compare on an LCOE basis?
This next graph shows the lowest cost wind (in the best regions) is
already beating coal and gas. Solar in the sunniest regions will do so
by 2020. And the cost of solar and wind will continue to fall, with
solar eventually beating wind.
Even these estimates rely on relatively conservative estimates of the
cost falls in solar. Citigroup estimates a “learning rate” of 19 per
cent – meaning that solar costs will fall that much with each doubling
in capacity (a variation of Moore’s Law). This translates into cost
falls of 2 per cent a year.
But as real-life experience shows, cost falls are happening faster
than that. Last week, one of the big solar module manufacturers, Trina
Solar, said costs had fallen 19 per cent in the past year, and would
continue to fall by at least 5 per cent to 6 per cent a year in coming
years as efficiencies were improved, manufacturing and labour costs
fell. Even with that quibble, Citigroup says that there is a financial advantage in installing renewable energy.
“We should think of installing renewable energy as a benefit rather than a cost to society,” it writes.
“This is one of the key benefits of examining total spend on an LCOE
basis, as it demonstrates well the shifting relative economics of
different generation technologies. Most important is this point that as
renewables become ‘cheaper’ than conventional, there is effectively a
net saving to using them.”
So, why does this matter?
Well, Citigroup says that between 2014-2040, the world is likely to
invest some $US190 trillion into energy – whether it takes action on
climate change or not. The difference between taking no action and Citi’s own “action” scenario results in little difference in costs, in fact it would result in a saving of $1.8 trillion, as we reported last week.
But the even greater savings comes in avoided damage to the economy in
environmental impact. Those costs, if the world persisted with a
business-a-usual rate, could be as high as $72 trillion.
In the “Citi ‘Action” scenario, the analysts have assumed that the
fossil fuel share across the globe declines from currently over 64 per
cent to 28 per cent by 2040, whilst solar PV and onshore wind energy
could make up to 22 per cent per cent of the electricity mix, and 40 per
cent including all renewables (including hydro and others).
“There is a limited difference ($US1.8 trillion) in the total bill to
2040 between our ‘Action’ and ‘Inaction’ scenarios,” Citigroup writes.
“However, we demonstrate the higher earlier spend on renewables and
energy efficiency in the action scenario, which leads to fuel savings
later. “Comparing the in-year differential cost between ‘Action’ and
‘Inaction ‘shows that there is a net cost per annum of following a
low-carbon path until 2025, after which we move into net savings via
lower fuel usage.
“At its worst, this net cost is only around 0.1% of global GDP; in a
cumulative sense there is a net cost out to 2035, beyond which there is a
net saving; at its worst this cumulative net cost is still only around
1% of current GDP. In the context of the potential liabilities, these
seem like relatively small figures.
“In a positive sense, a more diverse energy mix could make future
energy shocks less severe, as could the non-fuel nature of renewables. “The greater upfront investment in energy could also help to boost
growth and act as a partial offset to the effects of secular stagnation
being witnessed currently. Lower long-term energy costs as a percentage
of GDP could ultimately serve as a significant boost to GDP, especially
compared to the potential lost GDP from inaction.”
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/08/25/wind-and-solar-are-already-a-better-value-than-fossil-fuels/
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