Perspective is everything in life. Most of us would have said solar is, in fact, big enough to matter after achieving rapid growth. But this article puts a very different slant on things. And, the writers are dead on.
Scale is critical. Impacting our global environment takes, as pointed out here, massive investment. Solar and other renewables need to become a movement. Mainstream. Some day a requirred component to any building or house.
Similarly, we need to construct multiple utility-scale sites across many states. That on top of applying solar in hundreds of small scale applications--all the way down to body warmers in coats--will saturate the market. And capture enough of the sun to power many aspects of our lives.
Making Solar Big Enough to Matter
Solar
energy has become big business. Over the past decade it has plummeted
in cost, surged in volume, and, as booming industries do, benefited some
investors and burned others. The International Energy Agency has predicted
photovoltaic solar could provide up to 16 percent of the world’s
electricity by mid century — an enormous increase from the roughly 1
percent that solar generates today. But for solar to realize its
potential, governments will have to grow up too. They’ll need to
overhaul their solar policies to make them ruthlessly economically
efficient.
The widespread view that solar power
is a hopelessly subsidized business is quickly growing outdated. In
some particularly sunny spots, such as certain parts of the Middle East,
solar power now is beating fossil-fueled electricity on price without
subsidies.
Even where — as in the United States — solar needs subsidies, it’s getting cheaper.
American utilities now are signing 20-year agreements to buy solar
power at, and in some cases below, 5 cents per kilowatt-hour. Those
prices, which reflect tax breaks, are in some instances low enough to
compete with electricity from power plants that burn plentiful American
natural gas. Solar will be all the more competitive if gas prices rise —
something many predict — and as more governments impose prices on carbon dioxide emissions.
The
market is concluding that solar makes sense. In part that’s because of
technological advances that have made solar cells more efficient in
converting sunlight into power. In part it’s the result of manufacturing
scale, which has slashed the cost of solar-panel production. And, in
places that tax greenhouse-gas emissions, it’s in part because solar
produces carbon-free power.
But
much more needs to be done. Ratcheting up solar to produce
approximately 1 percent of global electricity has required a lot of
technology and investment. Making solar big enough to matter
environmentally would be an even more colossal undertaking. It would
require plastering the ground and roofs with billions of solar panels.
It would require significantly increasing energy storage, because solar
panels crank out electricity only when the sun shines, which is why,
today, solar often needs to be backed up by fossil fuels. And it would
require adding more transmission lines, because often the places where
the sun shines best aren’t where most people live.
The scale of this challenge makes economic efficiency crucial, as we argue in a report, “The New Solar System,”
released on Tuesday. The policies that have goosed solar have been
often unsustainable and sometimes contradictory. One glaring example:
With one hand, the United States is trying to make solar cheaper,
through tax breaks, and with the other hand it’s making solar more
expensive, through tariffs it has imposed on solar products imported
from China, the world’s largest maker and installer of solar panels.
The
tariffs are prompting Chinese solar manufacturers to set up factories
not in the United States, but in low-cost countries that aren’t subject
to the levies. And the Chinese government has responded
with its own tariffs against American-made solar goods. Those tariffs
have eroded the United States share in the one part of solar
manufacturing — polysilicon, the raw material for solar cells — in which
America once had a significant role.
That
solar is now involved in a trade war is a sign of how far it has come.
The United States developed the first solar cells in the 1950s and put
them into space in the 1960s. Japan and Germany
began putting big numbers of solar panels on rooftops in the 1990s. But
solar power didn’t really advance into a real industry until a decade
ago, when China stepped in.
In
the mid-2000s, stimulated by hefty solar subsidies in Europe, a handful
of entrepreneurs in China started producing inexpensive solar panels,
much as had been done in China before with T-shirts and televisions.
These entrepreneurs bought equipment from manufacturers in Europe and
the United States, built big factories with government subsidies, and
got down to business cranking out millions of solar panels for export.
Today,
China utterly dominates global solar-panel manufacturing. Last year,
according to the consulting firm IHS Markit, China accounted for 70
percent of global capacity for manufacturing crystalline-silicon solar
panels, the most common type. The United States share was 1 percent.
But
now, China’s solar industry is changing in little-noticed ways that
create both an imperative and an opportunity for the United States to up
its game. The Chinese industry is innovating technologically — indeed,
it’s starting to score world-record solar-cell efficiency — contrary
to a long-held myth that all China can do is manufacture others’
inventions cheaply. It’s expanding its manufacturing footprint across
the globe. And it’s scrambling to import more efficient ways of
financing solar power that have been pioneered in the West. The United
States needs to take these shifts into account in defining an American
solar strategy that minimizes the cost of solar power to the world while
maximizing the long-term benefit to the American economy.
A
more-enlightened United States policy approach to solar would seek
above all to continue slashing solar power’s costs — not to prop up
types of American solar manufacturing that can’t compete globally. It
would leverage, not aim to bury, China’s manufacturing superiority, with
closer cooperation on solar research and development. And it would
focus American solar subsidies more on research and development and
deployment than on manufacturing. As solar manufacturing continues to
automate, reducing China’s cheap-labor advantage, it is likely to make
more sense in the United States, at least for certain sorts of solar
products.
The
United States needs to play to its comparative advantages in the solar
sector. That requires a sober assessment of what China does well. There
are real tensions between China and the United States, including the
tariff fight, doubts about the protection of intellectual property in
China, and national-security concerns. But it’s time to put those
concerns into perspective, as investors, corporations and governments
try to do every day.
These
proposed shifts in American solar policy will upset partisans across
the political spectrum. They will offend liberals who have promised that
solar-manufacturing subsidies would bring the United States huge
numbers of green factory jobs. They will rankle conservatives who see
China as the enemy. How will the Trump administration view them? That’s
unclear.
President Trump has spoken approvingly of tariffs against China; as a presidential candidate, he criticized
“China’s unfair subsidy behavior.” Yet his nominee to be ambassador to
China, Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa, has called the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, a friend and said a “cooperative relationship” between the two countries “is needed more now than ever.”
Mr.
Trump argued in his 2015 book, “Crippled America” (since retitled
“Great Again”), that solar panels didn’t “make economic sense.” But he
also wrote that, when solar energy “proves to be affordable and reliable
in providing a substantial percent of our energy needs, then maybe
it’ll be worth discussing.”
That
time has arrived. A smarter solar policy — one with a more-nuanced view
of China — is something the new president ought to like.
Solar
isn’t just for the granola crowd anymore. It’s a global industry, and
it’s poised to make a real environmental difference. Whether it delivers
on that promise will depend on policy makers prodding it to become more
economically efficient. That will require a shift both from those who
have loved solar and from those who have laughed it off.
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