Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: abelard <abelard3@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2008 21:46:14 +0200
On Wed, 25 Jun 2008 19:51:06 +0100, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax
<dirk.bruere@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
w_tom wrote:
On Jun 25, 2:12 pm, Dirk Bruere at NeoPax <dirk.bru...@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
And what you are overlooking is that solar will probably be about a
quarter the price of nuclear, so demand will shift accordingly. Right
now electricity at night is cheaper.
Again, you missed the entire point. Your reasoning is again
completely subjective. If you know this, then you have numbers.
Where are your numbers? That was the point. Your entire conclusion
is wild speculation because (and again) you don't have numbers. What
do major electric consumers do. Work 24/7 because their factories are
that expensive or cost too much to shutdown for 8 or 16 hours.
Disagree? Fine. Where are your numbers? Where is your research?
That was the point. No numbers is a symptom of junk science
reasoning.
The numbers come from historical trends continuing for PV costs ie a
fall of 16% per annum. At $1/W PV becomes cost competitive with new coal
fired power stations, and with nuclear since French experience suggests
costs are similar.
$1/W is allegedly already here (Nanosolar), or more conservatively,
about 4 years away, depending on who you believe.
That corresponds to PV cells costing $200 per sq metre (assuming 20%
efficiency). There are no physical barriers as to why the price should
not continue to drop far below that price. For example, Nanosolar prints
PV ink onto stainless steel substrate. There is no inherent reason why
that has to limit the technology - any suitable conductor would suffice.
It is quite foreseeable that ultimately PV prices will drop by a further
factor of ten, to $20 per sq metre. 0.1 $/W or maybe even lower. So low,
in fact, that physical structure costs will dominate. The result will be
electricity so cheap that no other technology will be able to compete
for daytime power. Power at night will, by comparison, be grossly expensive.
I don't see any other technology, esp nuclear, being about to drop its
price by a factor of ten over the next decade or two.
jeroen van der veer, shell no. 1
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natural_resources/article3985479.ece
"On solar power, we believe that thin-film technology could hold the
most promise to generate electricity from the sun?s energy in an
economically viable manner. So in 2006 we decided to move from
conventional crystalline silicon production to CIS thin-film
technology.
With Silicon shortages continuing, the Shell patented CIS thin-film
technology uses 100 times less raw materials than traditional silicon
crystalline. It also offers the highest efficiency?s and is easier,
and we believe, cheaper to produce in high volumes.
Together with our joint venture partner Saint Gobain we continue to
develop the next generation of CIS based thin-film technology."
the number are awesome....*but*
there *are* routes to store solar energy via eg, methanol.....
regards
--
web site at www.abelard.org - news comment service, logic, economics
energy, education, politics, etc 1,552,396 document calls in year past
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
all that is necessary for [] walk quietly and carry
the triumph of evil is that [] a big stick.
good people do nothing [] trust actions not words
only when it's funny -- roger rabbit
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Ophelia
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Dirk Bruere at NeoPax
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- References:
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Dirk Bruere at NeoPax
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: abelard
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Gaz
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: abelard
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Gaz
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Dirk Bruere at NeoPax
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: w_tom
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Dirk Bruere at NeoPax
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: w_tom
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- From: Dirk Bruere at NeoPax
- Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- Prev by Date: Re: Did Britain become rich through industriousness or pillage?
- Next by Date: Re: When all the oil runs out....
- Previous by thread: Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- Next by thread: Re: Are there likely to be severe power shortages
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|