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Solar Is Cheapest Electricity in History, U.S. DOE Aims to Cut Costs 60% by 2030
(cleantechnica.com)
131 points
mg
| 1 comments |
26 Mar 21 20:07 UTC
|
HN request time: 0.219s
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rich_sasha
◴[
26 Mar 21 22:13 UTC
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No.
26597628
[source]
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>>26596333 (OP)
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If solar were free, but we still needed to pay for battery storage, how would it then compare in cost to fuel-based alternatives (fossil fuel, nuclear etc)?
replies(6):
>>26597661
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>>26597691
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>>26597763
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>>26597783
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>>26598615
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kleton
◴[
26 Mar 21 22:19 UTC
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No.
26597691
[source]
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>>26597628
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Would need $20/KWh battery storage to be competitive with nuclear for baseload according to
https://www.cell.com/joule/fulltext/S2542-4351(19)30300-9
At the moment, we're at about $800/KWh.
replies(3):
>>26597895
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>>26598636
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1.
turtlebits
◴[
26 Mar 21 22:45 UTC
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No.
26597898
[source]
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>>26597691
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~$140/KWh is the current low price for cells (that can be bought by consumers). I just built a battery last month.
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