When comparing power sources, we have to take the costs of system effects into account.
and
Barry Brook. This article was first published on The Conversation
.
A response was then published on Business Spectator. It is worth reading both pieces, and the comments that followed them (for instance, Martin's reply).
got
wide coverage with its claim that wind power is now cheaper than coal.
But a new report from the OECD shows that when you cover the full cost
to the grid, variable renewables like wind don’t add up as favourably.
that
introducing variable renewable energy resources such as solar and wind
into the electricity network comes with some extra cost penalties, due
to “system effects”. These system effects include intermittent
electricity access, network congestion, instability, environmental
impacts, and security of supply.
from
the OECD titled System Effects of Low-Carbon Electricity Systems gives
some hard dollar values for these additional imposts. The OECD work
focuses on nuclear power, coal, gas, and renewables such as wind and
solar. Their conclusion is that grid-level system costs can have
significant impacts on the total cost of delivered electricity for some
power-generation technologies.
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