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The
argument that we can’t do anything about global warming because our living
standards would plummet as coal is so much cheaper than renewables is so last
decade. The cheapest source of electricity in the
US now is wind power.
In
the case of solar power in the US, utility-scale solar power contracts are
being signed to deliver power at between 5 and 7.5 cents per kWh, even after
removing the investment tax credit worth roughly 2 cents per kWh. So that before
the tax credit, solar is now competitive with gas and new
coal plants.
Then there’s this (from a utility company’s annual report!).
Extraordinary.
Even
without a carbon tax, fossil fuels are no longer “cheap”. Even 3 years—2 years!
—ago, you could have made that point and been correct. But the collapse (there
is no other word) in the price of renewables is so dramatic that renewables are
either cheaper or soon will be cheaper than fossil fuels. And if you add in the
externalities (and you should) all the fossil fuels are much more expensive than renewables. Gas is still viable (though
expensive), because peaking-power plant using gas can be easily and quickly
started up when needed and then switched off later. Coal is no good for that
(think of how long it takes you to get a coal fire going)
The
coal spruikers go on and on about the “variability” of renewables. But the
output of widely separated wind farms is uncorrelated, which means that two wind
farms separated by five or six hundred kms can in effect act as base-load power
generators. And wind and solar power
are negatively correlated if there is any correlation at all: it’s often windy
when the sun isn’t shining (for example, when a cold front comes through, or
during a thunderstorm)
Be that as it may, there are already several places in the world where renewables provide more than 40% of electricity generation without grid instability: for example, the state of South Australia, Denmark, Spain, and many where renewables are over 25%. And that’s before batteries have started to play a role in stabilising the grid and provided for periods when both sun and wind are absent. But—and this is key— battery costs are falling by 15-20% per annum. When Tesla’s gigafactory is completed in 2017, battery costs will fall by 2/3rds. Grid storage will be cheaper than installing new base-load capacity.
Coal is finished, even
without a carbon tax/cap-and-trade. Last year, for the first time in 15 years, total
coal demand in China fell, by 3%, and CO2 emissions by 1%. This at a time when
real GDP grew by 7.6%, an extraordinary decline in the energy:GDP intensity of nearly
9%. In one year!!!!! And China is choosing renewables not just or even because
it knows global warming is real and dangerous (it has no demented plutocrats
funding denialist websites and political campaigns) but because renewables are
clean and cheap and coal is filthy, and because renewables give China energy
independence. China is by far the world’s largest consumer of coal, and of
course, the world’s largest emitter of CO2. Most of the world’s 10 largest
solar panel and wind turbine manufacturers are Chinese. It makes sense from every possible point of
view for the Chinese to switch to renewables.
And they already are.
In India, the great hope of
coal barons, 25% of the population is not even connected to the grid. And they
prolly never will be, because for under $100, small solar panels with an
inbuilt battery, mobile phone charger and LED light are being sold to peasants
outside the grid. Who needs an expensive to build and maintain grid? In addition, India plans to install 100 gW of
solar (currently 3 gW capacity is installed) to feed in to the grid. Of course,
actual production from solar panels in those latitudes is only 30 – 40% of
nameplate capacity, but already about 30% of India’s electricity is generated
by renewables/hydro. This percentage will only rise—at the expense of coal.
No doubt existing
coal-fired power stations globally will continue to pollute until they reach the
end of their safe working lives. But no one is going to build new coal power
stations, because the cost of the renewables triad (wind, solar, batteries) is
falling inexorably and rapidly. No
prudent investor will provide funding for the 30-year life of a new power
station. Frankly, no prudent
investor would buy or invest in a coal mine. Certainly, I hold none in the
portfolios I manage.
The denialists are still
fighting last decade’s battles. No rational and informed person doubts the
reality of global warming, and given the variability in likely outcomes, with
risk multiplied by cost clearly to the upside (risk alone is not the best
metric: saying temps will rise 2 C plus or minus 1 C doesn’t show that 2+1 is
much more costly for the world than 2-1) prudent ppl will incline towards
renewables especially if they are already
cheaper.
The
fall in renewables costs is so rapid that we keep on being surprised. The latest data show incontrovertibly that even without a carbon tax, renewables
are viable. And the crackpot climate change denialists have become irrelevant
(though they remain infuriating) because the push towards replacing fossil
fuels with renewables is no longer driven just by sentiment or ethics or fears
about the state of the world or by the greens (I vote Green by the way) but by
relentless economics. Hard-headed and -hearted finance and business people and
politicians will choose renewables because that decision makes sense—despite
the shrill denunciations of the coal-funded
denialists. If these hard-headed
people can clothe themselves in virtue
doing profitable things which also stop global warming they surely will.
I am not a scientist let
alone a physicist. But I have been managing money for 40 years, and I can see
an emerging trend. That is how I make money for my clients and myself. I don’t fully
understand the technicals of climate science. But the broad thrust of the
argument is (a) crystal-clear and (b) borne out by the data. Equally, the march
of renewables is (a) obvious, (b) inevitable and inexorable and (c) driven by a
compelling economic logic.
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