Alex Kirby in the Ecologist
The
cheapest way of generating energy today is to use renewable fuels - and the
authors of a new analysis predict that renewables are set to enjoy even more of
an advantage within a few years.
The study by the Carbon Tracker Initiative says
renewable power generation costs are already lower on average worldwide than
those of fossil fuels.
It couples this with a bold claim that clean energy plants
will become more cost-competitive by 2020.
The Carbon Tracker authors call for new thinking about what's
happening in the energy markets in the wake of the UN climate talks in Paris
last December, which concluded the Paris Agreement on tackling climate change.
They say assuming that demand for energy from fossil fuels
will remain high for years ahead could be seriously mistaken.
Renewables undermine fossil fuel viability
The study uses a tool called a Levelised Cost of Electricity (LCOE)
sensitivity analysis to compare the power-generation costs of four new-build
coal, gas, wind and solar plants.
The LCOE is a way to compare different methods of electricity
generation, using the average total cost to build and operate a power plant divided
by its total lifetime energy output.
And the study shows that reduced load factors (measures of
efficiency) and shorter lifetimes for coal and gas plants in a world that is
steadily decarbonising significantly undermine the plants' economics. It says
few models so far have taken these factors into account.
At the same time, solar and wind energy can rely on
lower-cost capital and cheaper technology, further improving the relative
competitive position of renewables.
"This analysis explains why renewables are already the cheapest
option in a number of markets", says Paul Dowling, a
co-author of the report. "This
trend is only likely to spread as the growth of renewables undermines the
economics of fossil fuels."
Lower costs of capital for renewables will lower
prices further
Carbon Tracker says another important point to consider is
who is developing renewables plants. Developers and management funds with lower
costs of capital are entering the market, bringing down LCOEs for more
capital-intensive renewables.
And taking into account that renewable energy is spreading
more widely, and that workers are becoming more at home with the technologies
it employs, this reduces still further the capital costs of clean power plants.
The study says that, after 2020, the impetus developed by the
Paris Agreement will see renewables on average more cost-competitive, even if
fossil fuel prices fall and carbon prices are modest at around US$10 per tonne
of CO2, or lower.
"Markets are having to deal with integrating variable renewables on
a growing scale", says Matt Gray, senior Carbon
Tracker analyst and a co-author of the report.
"Rather than continue debating whether this energy transition is
already occurring, it is time to focus on developing the opportunities in energy
storage and demand management that can smooth the process."