
What’s Holding Back Renewable
Energy?
Oxford researchers recently predicted precipitous growth in
green
energy over the next 10 to 15 years, decreasing global need
for fossil
fuels. Yet, the largest renewable energy company
in the world, SunEdison, just filed for bankruptcy
on the heels
of the fall of another clean energy giant, Abengoa. Is the
renewable energy sector in trouble? What is holding back more
immediate success in the industry?
* predict =
예측[예견]하다/ precipitous = 급작스러운; 가파른, 깎아지른 듯한/ green energy = 그린(친환경, 청정) 에너지/
fossil fuel = 화석 연료/ renewable energy = 재생 가능 에너지 (태양열·수력·풍력 에너지 등)/ file for
bankruptcy = 파산 신청을 하다/ on the heels of ~ = ~후 바로[즉시]; 바쁘게/ hold ~ back = ~을
저지[제지]하다
무엇이 재생 에너지 산업의 더 즉각적인 성공을 저지하고
있나요?
1. Solar Energy Will
Thrive
Solar module costs have plummeted. Integrating it into
the grid is easier.
And governments recognize its social benefits.
2. Subsidies in the Wrong Places Skew
Solar’s Power
The value of renewable power is often lower
because investments do not always target
the highest-quality resource: Solar
goes where the subsidies are, not where the sun shines.
3. Utilities Must Stop Blocking Solar
Growth
Some utilities take advantage of outdated laws to
prevent solar companies from offering customers
options to lower or
eliminate upfront costs of installing solar panels.
4. Owners Need to Understand Energy Use in Their
Buildings
Most don't know how much energy is being used and
why and so they fail to make energy choices
that would be useful to
them.
Sample
Essay
Subsidies in the
Wrong Places Skew Renewable Energy’s Power
Renewable
power has experienced tremendous growth: Wind and solar’s share of total U.S.
power generation increased to 5 percent in 2015 from less than 0.5 percent in
2005. This growth reflects both innovation driving down costs and an array of
subsidies, including tax credits and grants (about 30 percent of investment
costs), accelerated depreciation (15 percent of investment costs), loan
guarantees (7 percent of investment costs), and state renewable power mandates,
which create valuable credits – worth as much as 50 cents per kilowatt hour for
solar in Massachusetts and New Jersey – that complement the revenue stream from
power sales. Continued investment in renewable power, however, must confront
investment challenges in the power sector.
Innovation has driven lower
costs for wind, solar and their competitors. The fracking revolution has
drastically lowered the cost of U.S. natural gas, with the price of natural gas
delivered to the power sector in 2015 equal to one-third the price in 2008.
As the costs of producing power have fallen, so has the demand for
electricity. Since 2010, the U.S. economy has grown 11 percent, but electricity
consumption has fallen by 1 percent in part because of subsidies and standards
targeting energy efficiency. The absence of a growing power market reduces the
need for utilities to invest in new power generation. In some parts of the
country, the costs of new wind and solar may appear competitive with new coal or
natural gas facilities, but new renewable investment effectively competes with
existing, lower-cost power plants.
The incumbent coal-fired power plants
also enjoy a large, implicit subsidy. In today’s dollars, the average U.S.
coal-fired power plant imposes costs through premature mortality and respiratory
illnesses of about 3.5 cents per kilowatt hour. Accounting for the climate
change damages associated with burning coal would likely double this cost.
Eliminating these subsidies would significantly improve the economics of
lower-polluting sources of power.
Even with full pricing of pollution for
coal-fired power plants, renewable power typically cannot be ramped up and down
in response to short-term swings in power demand: Sometimes the wind blows or
the sun shines when people don’t need the power. As a result, utilities may
value natural gas capacity more than renewable capacity, since they can dispatch
natural gas to meet changes in demand. The value of renewable power is also
lower because the investment does not always target the highest-quality
resource. Solar goes where the subsidies are, not where the sun shines. Thus,
Massachusetts and New Jersey may have relatively low-quality solar, but rank
among the top six states in installed solar capacity. And Germany, which has
rarely been described as sun-drenched, hosts the most solar capacity in the
world.
Given the existing low-cost competition in a no-growth market,
renewable developers face tough investment challenges absent new policies. A
carbon tax could substantially increase market demand for renewable power and
encourage the retirement of pollution-intensive coal-fired power plants.