Saturday, April 27, 2013

Grid Parity has been achieved in California, India, China and other states

 The reason I wanted to quote things regarding Grid Parity is that Grid Parity has been reached in the following places on earth: California with other states to follow, India China and other states around the globe. Here is a partial quote regarding Grid parity from another article: begin  partial quote:

"The low entry price advantage of solar, along with it having already reached grid parity with average traditional energy sources in California, with other states to follow, has the traditional power industry on the edge.
Grid parity has also been reached in India, China, and other countries around the globe."

end partial quote from:

Solar Power Comes of Age: Will Investors Benefit?

 

begin quote from: 

Wikipedia under the heading "Grid Parity": 

 

 

Grid parity

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Grid parity (or socket parity) occurs when an alternative energy source can generate electricity at a levelized cost (LCoE) that is less than or equal to the price of purchasing power from the electricity grid. The term is most commonly used when discussing renewable energy sources, notably solar power and wind power.
Reaching grid parity is considered to be the point at which an energy source becomes a contender for widespread development without subsidies or government support. It is widely believed that a wholesale shift in generation to these forms of energy will take place when they reach grid parity.

Contents

Overview

The price of electricity from the grid is complex. Most power sources in the developed world are generated in industrial scale plants developed by private or public consortiums. The company providing the power and the company delivering that power to the customers are often separate entities who enter into a Power Purchase Agreement that sets a fixed rate for all of the power delivered by the plant. On the other end of the wire, the local distribution company (LDC) charges rates that will cover their power purchases from the variety of producers they use.
This relationship is not straightforward; for instance, an LDC may buy large amounts of base load power from a nuclear plant at a low fixed cost and then buy peaking power only as required from natural gas peakers at a much higher cost, perhaps five to six times. Depending on their billing policy, this might be billed to the customer at a flat rate combining the two rates the LDC pays, or alternately based on a time-based pricing policy that tries to more closely match input costs with customer prices.
As a result of these policies, the exact definition of "grid pricing" varies not only from location to location, but customer to customer and even hour to hour.
For instance, wind power is generally considered to be a form of base load and connects to the grid on the distribution side (as opposed to the customer side). This means it competes with other large forms of industrial-scale power like hydro, nuclear or coal-fired plants, which are generally inexpensive forms of power. Additionally, the generator will be charged by the distribution operator to carry the power to the markets, adding to their levelized costs.
In comparison, solar energy is considered to be a form of peaking power plant, and therefore competes against more expensive forms of power like natural gas. Additionally, solar has the advantage of scaling easily from systems as small as a single solar panel placed on the customer's roof. In this case the system has to compete with the post-delivery retail price, which is generally much higher than the wholesale price at the same time.
It is also important to consider changes in grid pricing when determining whether or not a source is at parity. For instance, the introduction of time-of-use pricing and a general increase in power prices in Mexico during 2010 and 2011 has suddenly made many forms of renewable energy reach grid parity. A drop in power prices, as has happened in some locations due to the late-2000s recession, can likewise render systems formerly at parity no longer interesting.
In general terms, fuel prices continue to increase, while renewable energy sources continue to reduce in up-front costs. As a result, widespread grid parity for wind and solar are generally predicted for the time between 2015 and 2020.

Solar power

Projection of levelized cost of PV energy in Europe[1]

Pricing solar

Grid parity is most commonly used in the field of solar power, and most specifically when referring to solar photovoltaics (PV). As PV systems do not use fuel and are largely maintenance-free, the levelized cost of electricity is dominated almost entirely by the capital cost of the system. If one makes the not-unrealistic assumption that the discount rate will be similar to the inflation rate of grid power, then one can calculate the levelized cost simply by dividing the original capital cost by the total amount of electricity produced over the system's lifetime.
As the LCoE of PV is dominated by the capital costs, and the capital costs by the panels, the wholesale prices of PV panels are the main consideration when tracking grid parity. These prices have undergone an unprecedented downward fall during the period between 1990 and 2010, when the price of electricity from these sources dropped about 25 times. This rate of price reduction is accelerating; between late-2009 and mid-2011 the wholesale cost of solar modules dropped approximately 70%.[2] These pressures have demanded efficiencies throughout the construction chain, so total installed cost has fallen even more dramatically.
The average retail price of solar cells as monitored by the Solarbuzz group fell from $3.50/watt to $2.43/watt over the course of 2011, and a decline to prices below $2.00/watt seems inevitable.[3] Solarbuzz tracks retail prices, which includes a large mark-up over wholesale prices, and systems are commonly installed by firms buying at the wholesale price. For this reason, total installation costs are commonly similar to the retail price of the panels alone. Recent total-systems installation costs are around $2500/kWp in Germany[4] or $3,250 in the UK.[5] As of 2011, the capital cost of PV has fallen well below that of nuclear power and is set to fall further.[3]
All that remains to calculate the LCoE is the expected production. Modules are generally warranted for 25 years and suffer only minor degradation during that time, so all that is needed to predict the generation is the local insolation. According to PVWatts a one-kilowatt system in Matsumoto, Nagano will produce 1187 kWh of electricity a year. Over a 25 year lifetime, the system will produce about 29,675 kWh (not accounting for the small effects of system degradation, about 0.25% a year). If this system costs $5,000 to install ($5 per watt), very conservative compared to worldwide prices, the LCoE = 5,000/29,675 ~= 17 cents per kWh. This is lower than the average Japanese residential rate of ~19.5 cents, which means that, in this simple case, PV has reached grid parity for residential users in Japan.

Reaching parity

Deciding whether or not PV is at grid parity is more complex than other sources, due to a side-effect of one of its main advantages. Compared to most sources, like wind turbines or hydro dams, PV can scale successfully to systems as small as one panel or as large as millions. In the case of small systems, they can be easily installed at the customer's location. In this case the LCoE competes against the retail price of grid power, which includes all upstream additions like transmission fees, taxes, etc. In the example above, grid parity has been reached in Nagano. However, retail prices are generally much higher than wholesale prices, so grid parity may not have been reached for the very same system installed on the supply-side of the grid.
In order to encompass all of these possibilities, Japan's NEDO defines the grid parity in three phases:[6]
  • 1st phase grid parity: residential grid-connected PV systems
  • 2nd phase grid parity: industrial/transport/commercial sectors
  • 3rd phase grid parity: general power generation
These categories are ranked in terms of the price of power they displace; residential power is more expensive than commercial wholesale. Thus, it is expected that the 1st phase would be reached earlier than the 3rd phase.
Predictions from the 2006 time-frame expected retail grid parity for solar in the 2016 to 2020 era,[7][8] but due to rapid downward pricing changes, more recent calculations have forced dramatic reductions in time scale, and the suggestion that solar has already reached grid parity in a wide variety of locations.[2] The European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA) calculated that PV would reach parity in many of the European countries by 2020, with costs declining to about half of those of 2010.[1] However, this report was based on the prediction that prices would fall 36 to 51% between 2010 and 2020, a decrease that actually took place during the year the report was authored. The parity line was claimed to have been crossed in Australia in September 2011,[9] and module prices have continued to fall since then. By late 2011, the fully loaded cost of solar PV was projected to likely fall below $0.15/kWh for most of the OECD and reach $0.10/kWh in sunnier regions like the southern United States or Spain.[10] This is below the retail rate for power in much of the OECD already. In 2013, Germany's Deutsche Bank was particularly optimistic about solar power price parity in India, the U.S., China, the U.K., Germany, Spain and Italy.[11]

Rapid uptake

Photovoltaics are now starting to compete in the real world without subsidies. Shi Zhengrong has said that, as of 2012, unsubsidised solar power is already competitive with fossil fuels in India, Hawaii, Italy and Spain. As PV system prices decline it's inevitable that subsidies will end. "Solar power will be able to compete without subsidies against conventional power sources in half the world by 2015".[12][13]
Predictions that a power source becomes self-supporting when parity is reached appear to be coming true. According to many measures, PV is the fastest growing source of power in the world:
For large-scale installations, prices below $1.00/watt are now common. In some locations, PV has reached grid parity, the cost at which it is competitive with coal or gas-fired generation. More generally, it is now evident that, given a carbon price of $50/ton, which would raise the price of coal-fired power by 5c/kWh, solar PV will be cost-competitive in most locations. The declining price of PV has been reflected in rapidly growing installations, totalling about 23 GW in 2011. Although some consolidation is likely in 2012, as firms try to restore profitability, strong growth seems likely to continue for the rest of the decade. Already, by one estimate, total investment in renewables for 2011 exceeded investment in carbon-based electricity generation.[3]
The dramatic price reductions in the PV industry have been causing a number of other power sources to become less interesting. Nevertheless, there remains the widespread belief that concentrating solar power (CSP) will be even less expensive than PV, although this is suitable for industrial-scale projects only, and thus has to compete at wholesale pricing. One company stated in 2011 that CSP costs 12¢(US)/kWh to produce in Australia, and expects this to drop to 6¢(US)/kWh by 2015 due to improvements in technology and reductions in equipment manufacturing costs.[14] Greentech Media predicts that LCoE of CSP and PV power will lower to $0.07 - $0.12/kWh by 2020 in California.[15]

Wind power

Grid parity also applies to wind power where it varies according to wind quality and existing distribution infrastructure. ExxonMobil predicts wind power real cost will approach parity with natural gas and coal without carbon sequestration and be cheaper than natural gas and coal with carbon sequestration by 2025.[16]
Wind turbines reached grid parity in some areas of Europe in the mid-2000s, and in the US around the same time. Falling prices continue to drive the levelized cost down and it has been suggested that it has reached general grid parity in Europe in 2010, and will reach the same point in the US around 2016 due to an expected reduction in capital costs of about 12%.[17] Nevertheless, a significant amount of the wind power resource in North America remains above grid parity due to the long transmission distances involved.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ a b "Solar Photovoltaics Competing in the Energy Sector", EPIA, September 2011
  2. ^ a b K. Brankera, M.J.M. Pathaka, J.M. Pearce, "A review of solar photovoltaic levelized cost of electricity", Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, Volume 15 Issue 9 (December 2011), pp. 4470-4482
  3. ^ a b c John Quiggin (January 3, 2012). "The End of the Nuclear Renaissance". National Interest.
  4. ^ Bundesverband Solarwirtschaft Installation Cost of Photovoltaics
  5. ^ How Much Do Solar Panels Cost in the UK?
  6. ^ Outline of the Roadmap PV2030+, NEDO, June 2009 (mostly in Japanese, but has an English summary from p. 17)
  7. ^ Gaining on the grid
  8. ^ Energy Information Administration, (November 2010). Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources in the Annual Energy Outlook 2011.
  9. ^ "Solar industry celebrates grid parity", ABC News, 7 September 2011
  10. ^ Economics of PV: Power Costs, WorldOfPhotovoltaics.com website.
  11. ^ "German bank reports solar power cost in India and Italy has reached grid parity". Technology.org. Technology.org. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  12. ^ Mark Clifford (Feb. 8, 2012). "China’s visible solar power success". MarketWatch.
  13. ^ Tim Keating (3 February 2012). "Death to PV Subsidies". Renewable Energy World.
  14. ^ Introduction to Concentrating Solar Power. Desertec-Australia.org website
  15. ^ Cost and LCOE by Generation Technology, 2009-2020, GTM Research, 2010
  16. ^ ExxonMobil Corporation. "The Outlook for Energy: A View to 2030". Retrieved February 16, 2011.
  17. ^ "Onshore wind to reach grid parity by 2016", BusinessGree
  18. end quote from:
  19. Wikipedia under the Heading "Grid Parity".

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