In April, newly appointed U.S. Secretary of Energy Rick Perry called for a study of the U.S. electricity grid. He wanted the study to reveal why so many coal plants were retiring and whether or not energy policies (renewable folks, think the ITC, PTC, RPS) were distorting the market and making the grid unstable.
As most in the energy industry knew, the answer is incredibly nuanced. The 187-page report, released today, details the many reasons impacting the retirement of coal plants — the fact that they are old, in need of upgrades, costlier to run than natural gas plants, and not running at full capacity — are just some of them.
The report also explains the reasons for the uptick in renewables, which it calls VRE (variable renewable energy) and points out that lots of government money has been spent in R&D to bring down technology costs and in direct subsidies to VRE power plants. But it also attempts to uncover some of the more nuanced reasons for the growth of renewables and rightly points out that many of those attributes are not compensated by the design of the wholesale market.
Americans and their elected representatives value the various benefits specific power plants offer, such as jobs, community economic development, low emissions, local tax payments, resilience, energy security, or the national security benefits associated with a nuclear industrial base. Most of these benefits are not recognized or compensated by wholesale electricity markets, and this has given rise to a variety of state and private efforts that include keeping open or shutting down established baseload generators and incentivizing VRE generation.
The report then delves into reliability and resilience and affordability. It’s final policy recommendations include reforming wholesale electricity pricing in centrally-organized markets, coming up with a valuation for essential reliability services, ensuring that the bulk power system is resilient and the promotion of R&D for “next generation/21st century grid reliability and resilience tools.”
Rocky Mountain Institute’s Amory Lovins released the following commentary about the study:
What the summary gets right
The summary of the DOE study findings and recommendations identifies several important points that are critical to address as we navigate the future of the grid:
What the summary leaves out
The study summary identifies important challenges, but fails to account for the possibility, and indeed the current reality, that renewable energy and distributed energy resources are increasingly a better choice to address these challenges than conventional power plants.
Missing the opportunity at hand
The summary of the DOE’s study identifies the right issues to address, but in its narrow conception of 20th Century technology as the solution, it misses out on the opportunity to reap the benefits of 21st Century innovation and drive the US grid towards a least-cost, reliable, and resilient future. The study summary recommends that the US seek “energy dominance” - but it suggests that we look backwards to find it. To truly dominate in the new energy economy, we should gracefully retire the aging baseload assets whose time has come, embrace the opportunities offered by new technologies and continued innovation, and secure the United States’ position as a leader, not a laggard, in the global energy transition.
Renewable Energy World will continue to publish commentary from electricity industry thought-leaders about how the US DOE Grid Study will impact the future of electricity in the country.
Input your address to see if it is solar friendly and how much you can save with solar.
Great. Your address is perfect for solar. Solar incentive is still available. Select monthly utility cost and calculate the size of solar system you will need now.
kw System size | years Payback period | Lifetime savings |
No money down, 100% finance is available.
Comments