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Environment & Energy
Showing Original Post only (View all)IEA says wind and solar can carry bulk of energy transformation [View all]
IEA says wind and solar can carry bulk of energy transformation
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has released a report in which it concludes that the integration of large amounts of renewable energy can be achieved by any country at only a small increase on whole system costs, compared with the current fossil-fuel heavy electricity systems. Making the conclusion even more startling is that the IEA used present-day costs for solar PV and wind, with the two most widely-deployed renewable energy technologies set to provide the bulk of the generating capacity in these transformed electricity systems.
While renewable energy is often blamed for driving electricity prices up and having a costly destabilising affect on electricity grids, the IEA says that integration of renewables into electricity grids and markets can be done so at little cost. For the first 5-10 percent of what it calls variable renewable energy (VRE, essentially wind and solar), the IEA says this poses no technical or economic challenges at all. Even for higher levels of up to 45 per cent penetration, it says would cost only 10% to 15% more than the status quo.
The IEA says the key to incorporating high levels of wind and solar is for countries to employ renewable energy in a way that supports the grid, investing in additional flexible generating capacity and improving the operation of electricity markets.
Integration is not simply about adding wind and solar on top of business as usual, said IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven. We need to transform the system as a whole to do this cost-effectively. van der Hoeven used the term reliable renewable resources throughout her presentation, it seems making the point that solar and wind are not highly variable and therefore unreliable and costly.
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has released a report in which it concludes that the integration of large amounts of renewable energy can be achieved by any country at only a small increase on whole system costs, compared with the current fossil-fuel heavy electricity systems. Making the conclusion even more startling is that the IEA used present-day costs for solar PV and wind, with the two most widely-deployed renewable energy technologies set to provide the bulk of the generating capacity in these transformed electricity systems.
While renewable energy is often blamed for driving electricity prices up and having a costly destabilising affect on electricity grids, the IEA says that integration of renewables into electricity grids and markets can be done so at little cost. For the first 5-10 percent of what it calls variable renewable energy (VRE, essentially wind and solar), the IEA says this poses no technical or economic challenges at all. Even for higher levels of up to 45 per cent penetration, it says would cost only 10% to 15% more than the status quo.
The IEA says the key to incorporating high levels of wind and solar is for countries to employ renewable energy in a way that supports the grid, investing in additional flexible generating capacity and improving the operation of electricity markets.
Integration is not simply about adding wind and solar on top of business as usual, said IEA Executive Director Maria van der Hoeven. We need to transform the system as a whole to do this cost-effectively. van der Hoeven used the term reliable renewable resources throughout her presentation, it seems making the point that solar and wind are not highly variable and therefore unreliable and costly.
It can. What remains to be seen is whether it will.
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That is always an integral part of planning for a distributed, renewable energy system
kristopher
Feb 2014
#10
You're significantly misstating the findings of the study; which is one of probably hundreds...
kristopher
Feb 2014
#11
In the large picture resource constraints affecting renewable rollout are nil.
kristopher
Feb 2014
#12
The real significance of this study isn't the findings - it is who is publishing those findings
kristopher
Feb 2014
#15