Interesting Links for 16-08-2022
Aug. 16th, 2022 12:00 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
- 1. Under Marxism, which will be the correct way to eat?
- (tags:food cooking communism funny restaurant )
- 2. New Omicron jab to be rolled out within weeks after UK becomes first country to approve it
- (tags:UK Pandemic vaccine )
- 3. On The Society Of Authors and transphobia
- (tags:LGBT authors UK transgender )
- 4. Estonian government will remove Soviet Union war monuments
- (tags:Russia war statue Estonia )
- 5. Home solar panels will now pay for themselves in just four years as energy bills soar
- (tags:solarpower electricity money )
- 6. The majority of babies born in the UK have unmarried parents
- (tags:marriage babies uk )
- 7. Saving Lake Windermere
- (tags:UK water Doom )
no subject
Date: 2022-08-16 04:20 pm (UTC)https://ourworldindata.org/renewable-energy
and this
https://ourworldindata.org/energy-production-consumption
and this
https://www.iea.org/reports/key-world-energy-statistics-2020
Wind provided 1,862 terawatthours
Solar provided 1,033 terawatthours
hydro provided 4,346 terawatthours
out of about 170,000 terawatthours of total energy demand (the figures are a bit fudged but good enough for this)
So solar is producing about 0.6% of total energy, wind about 1.1% and hydro 2.5%. Total about 4.2%
Hydro is unlikely to increase much over the next two decades so, if we move to 100% energy from renewables the growth pretty much all has to come from solar and wind. (I'm bullish on geothermal but no one else seems to be)
Ten years ago wind was 440 TWH and Solar 65 TWH so over the last ten years wind production has increased by 1,422 or 142TWH per year and solar 965 or 96 TWH - so about 230TWH. Assume the next few years will be better for renewables and or add in a bit of biomass and geothermal and we're looking at about 0.15% of global energy demand moving to renewables a year.
The picture is slightly better for renewables because the fudging I mentioned is to adjust for renewables better efficiency at turning energy inputs in to usable energy.
So we need about a 100-fold increase in the deployment of renewables to get from annualised increases of 0.15% to 15.0% per year shift in energy source.(Renewables provide all energy by about 2035 - allowing for increases in total energy demand) A 20-fold increase gets us from 0.15% per year to 3% per year. (Renewables provide all energy by about 2075. )
That's not great news I think.
no subject
Date: 2022-08-17 10:07 am (UTC)As you say, solar has gone from 65TWh to 1,032TWh in the last 10 years. That's an increase of 15x. The same increase again would be to 15,000TWh, and again would be 225,000TWh. So if we keep increasing at the same rate we have been over the last ten years then in 20 years' time we'll get there with solar alone.
Wind, going from 440TWh to 1,861TWh, is an increase of about 4x. So another 2 decades would increase that by only about 16x. Which is only about 30TWh in total.
Of course, scaling is very rarely as simple as that, and solar might hit an inflection point in its growth, while wind might take off at a higher rate. But even so that looks pretty hopeful to me.
(Over the last 5 years solar has trebled. Which would still mean about 10,000TWh by 2031, and around 100,000TWh by 2041. Those sound like good figures to me. All figures from here.)
no subject
Date: 2022-08-17 11:14 am (UTC)I think it is probably true that both solar PV and wind have reached a cost inflection point where they are the cheapest avaible option and the previous 10 years are not a super-reliable guide to the next ten years. I'm just looking at the increases in deployment required and wondering where the factories to make the kit are being built today in order to expand production that much in the near future.