Tony Seba calls it "God Parity" when solar plus storage falls below the cost of transmission. |
This is the
latest Tony Seba speech. It's long but eminently watchable.
He makes the usual point with
the two pictures of the same New York street in 1900 (with just one car, the
rest horses) and 1913 (all cars except for one horse-drawn carriage); of how
AT&T (the inventor of the mobile phone!) hired McKinsey and Co in 1985 to
forecast total mobile phone demand by the year 2000, and were 120 tmies out;
and how Kodak (the inventor of the digital camera !) went from record profits
in 2000 to bankruptcy in 2012 as conventional camera sales collapsed.
He pointed out that technological
adoption rates (for successful technologies) are ALWAYS S-curves,
starting slowly then accelerating, and only peaking out when they
approach 100% market share. Over the last couple of decades, the S-curves
have become steeper: new technologies are being adopted faster.
Lithium ion batteries fell in
cost by 14% per annum from 1995 to 2010. From 2010 to 2014 the rate of
decline accelerated to 16% per annum. From 2010 to 2016 it accelerated
again to 20% per annum [which implies that in the last couple of years it has
been higher than 20%, which we know is true] For Con Ed (a US utility)
1/3rd of generating assets are used for just 6 hours a year. So even if
batteries are too expensive to be used for 3 or 4 or 5 hours of time-shifting power
output, they are already cost competitive for these brief periods of peaking
power. By 2020 or so (3 years away!) it will cost the average American
consumer just $1 a day to store 24 hours of electricity demand. But
disruptions starts earlier. The most profitable part of utility sales is
the supply in the afternoon-evening peak which is just 6 hours. Already
tropical islands are switching to 100% solar+batteries because it is cheaper
than diesel.
ICE (internal combustion
engine) cars, i.e., petrol/diesel cars convert just 17-21% of the energy stored
in the petrol/diesel into motion; electric cars convert 90-95%. Plus
electrons are much cheaper to transmit than atoms. He gives the example
of a Jeep Liberty which would cost $15,000 for 5 years of "gas" (i.e.,
petrol) vs $1565 if it were electric. Petrol cars have 2000+ moving parts
(transmission, driveshaft, clutch, valves, differential , pistons, gears, carburettors,
crankshafts ....) EVs 20. Reflecting
this, Tesla has offered an infinite mile warranty. Biggest cost of maintenance is tyres. In 2013
he drew the battery cost curve which projected an SUV at $35-$40K in 2017-18,
$29K by end 2019, and $22K by end 2022 for cars with over 200 miles range. People said he was mad. But we have the Chevy Bolt, the Tesla Model 3
and soon the new Nissan Leaf.
Lidar (needed for autonomous vehicles) cost $70,000 in 2012, $1,000
in 2014, $250 in 2016. $90 Lidar on the
way. World’s first 1 teraflops computer cost $46 million in 2000 and covered
150 square metres. 2016, a 2.3 teraflops
computer by Invidia cost $59, and is about the size of a laptop. Invidia expects a 1000 times improvement by
2025. All these forces together will
lead to transport as a service: autonomous cars which you will only use when
you need them (the average car is used for only 4% of the time—the rest of the
time, it’s parked) Per mile, costs of transport will drop 10 fold. The (ICE) used car market will collapse. ICE
car companies will have to compete with zero-value used cars and transport as a
service which will be 10 times cheaper.
By 2030, the car fleet will be 80% smaller. Oil demand will peak in 2020, and will be 30%
lower by 2030.
A newly-built Danish school gets 50% of its electricity from solarpanels—in its walls. Copenhagen is 55
degrees N, 3 degrees south of Juneau in Alaska, and 5 degrees north of
Vancouver. If they can do it, 90% of the
world can. Installed solar capacity has
doubled every 2 years since 2000 (a 40% per annum growth rate) Solar provides 1.5% of total world
electricity, but it is just 6 doublings—12 years—away from providing 100% of
world electricity. By the end of this
year, solar will be at or below grid parity in 80% of the world. The falling cost of rooftop solar will soon
fall below the cost of transmission, never mind generation. Generation will be distributed, like an
internet of energy.
When I watch Tony Seba, I am optimistic about us—mankind—doing enough
to stop runaway global warming. Solar is
just getting cheaper every year, and if it continues growing at anything like
the rate it is now, we will cut CO2 emissions by 30% over the next 15
years. Electric cars will dominate the
market in 15 or 20 years, and that will lead to a further cut in emissions from
transport by 30% plus (remember a big chunk of oil demand is for stuff like
tarmac or as feedstocks for plastics).
If we can also cut the emissions of iron and steel, cement production,
and air transport we will be able to reduce emissions by 70% over the
next 20 years. This is far better than
the IEA (International Energy Agency)’s projections which assume emissions will keep
on rising for decades. Of course, you
then have to deal with dimwits like Australia’s “Liberal” party, which now
wishes to subsidise a coal-fired power station, which no utility will build (because it’s so much more expensive than renewables.) But I hope intelligence will win.
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