Here is the case of renewables in Europe. Solar power's actual power output is on average, only 11.2 percent of its rated or installed capacity. And the cost, solar power is up to 34 times the cost of putting up a natural gas power plant. wow.
Source: Charting the costs and effectiveness of Renewable Energy in Europe,
Reposted in http://notrickszone.com/2015/02/08/analysis-shows-wind-and-solar-power-in-europe-is-on-average-16-times-more-expensive-than-gas-fired-power/#sthash.1erMw947.dpbs, February 08, 2015.
Capacity factor of only 11.2 percent of its rated or installed capacity, wow. Meaning a 100 MW solar power plant can produce on average, only 11 MW. Well at night time, output is zero; on cloudy days, output may be 20-30 MW and on cloudless, sunny day, output may be 50 MW and higher. So you get an average capacity factor of 11 percent.
In Germany, the King of wind and solar power installation in the whole planet, here are the numbers.
Source: same as above.
Solar power is fine, they expand energy production in the planet. But giving it huge subsidy and priority in the national grid is not fine because such policy is forcing the rest of energy consumers to pay for expensive electricity.
Here is one clear example of energy cronyism, in Cadiz City, Negros Occidental: a 150-MW coal power plant has been scrapped, while a 100-MW solar power has been approved, with huge fanfare.
From Business Mirror, June 10, 2015:
BACOLOD CITY—Construction of the 100-megawatt (MW)
solar-power facility of Equis Funds Group, which is considered the biggest in
Southeast Asia, has started at Hacienda Paz, Barangay Tinampaan, Cadiz City in
northern Negros Occidental.
Equis Funds, Asia’s largest independent energy and
infrastructure private equity fund manager, is expected to complete the project
by the end of the year.
Representatives of Equis Funds, led by its Chief
Technology Officer Michael Vukelic, met with Gov. Alfredo Marañon Jr. and Cadiz
City Mayor Patrick Escalante at the Provincial Capitol on Tuesday. Escalante
said the solar-plant project, worth $175 million, is on a 175-hectare land
area.
From The Philippine Pride, June 14, 2015.
Craig Marsh, Equis Funds Group director, and executives
from Soleq, led by its chief technology officer Michael Vukelic, paid a
courtesy call on Gov. Alfredo Marañon Jr. at the Capitol yesterday, to brief
him on their solar project.
The plan to build a coal-fired power plant in Cadiz City
has been scrapped but the construction of a diesel-powered plant is still
ongoing, he added.
150 MW coal power has been scrapped? To be replaced by 100 MW of solar which has a potential average output of only 11 MW of more expensive electricity?
Electricity from solar and wind is expensive, about 2x
from coal or natural gas because of feed in tariff (FIT) and renewable
portfolio standards (RPS) provisions of the RE law of 2008 (RA 9513).
The solar plant and other facilities will occupy 175 hectares. That's a wide area of land. Compare it with Sual coal plant in Pangasinan, 1,218 MW
occupying only 280 hectares (power plant + other facilities + ash disposal area). Source, http://www.teamenergy.ph/about01_sual.php
Or compare it with Pagbilao coal power plant in Quezon province, 735 MW
existing + 400 MW expansion (unit 3), total 1,135 MW, occupying only 300
hectares including ash disposal area.
Coal, natural gas, big hydro, geothermal, are "dispatchable" energy sources. Meaning a power plant can dispatch based on power demand.
Solar and wind are "non-dispatchable" based on demand because they are dependent on the weather
and time of the day. When the wind does not blow, when the Sun does not shine,
a 100 MW solar and 500 MW wind will have great, combined output of zero. They are not useful for
baseload (always "on" 24/7) electricity production, yet are
expensive.
Climate alarmism and energy cronyism continue to fool the people. The UN, WWF, Greenpeace, Al Gore, almost all governments, etc. are responsible for this continued alarmism and public miseducation. Simply because they want more government role in environment, energy and taxation policies, more climate bureaucracies and junkets.
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See also:
Energy 34: Feed in Tariff Implementation in the Philippines, March 14, 2015
Energy 35: Coal Power Plant in Cadiz City, Negros Occidental, April 14, 2015
Energy Econ 37, More on Wind Power in Germany, June 07 2015
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