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Renewables Are Set To Overtake Gas and Coal By 2027 (computerworld.com)

Lucas123 writes: Renewable energy, including solar, wind and hydroelectric will overtake natural gas as an energy source by 2027. According to a new report from Bloomberg New Energy Finance, ten years later those same renewables will have surpassed the largest electricity-generating fossil fuel: coal. Solar and wind will account for almost 60% of the $11.4 trillion invested in energy over the next 25 years, according to Bloomberg's New Energy Outlook 2016 report. One conclusion that may surprise, Bloomberg noted, is that the forecast shows no golden age for natural gas, except in North America. As a global generation source, gas will be overtaken by renewables in 2027. The electric vehicle boom will increase electricity demand by 2,701TWh (terawatt hours), or 8% of global electricity demand in 2040. The rise of EVs will drive down the cost of lithium-ion batteries, making them increasingly attractive to be deployed alongside residential and commercial solar systems.

5 of 263 comments (clear)

  1. title seems to be misleading, at best. by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 4, Informative

    Title and summary don't agree. There is a difference between "surpass coal and gas by 2027" and "surpass gas by 2027 and surpass coal by 2037".

    Even ignoring the date differences, there's a difference between "surpass gas", "surpass coal", and "surpass gas and coal".

    And let's not get into the whole base load thing. Gas and solar isn't baseload, but coal is....

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    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    1. Re:title seems to be misleading, at best. by tomhath · · Score: 3, Informative

      As soon as you produce significant amounts of power with wind or solar, obviously you are replacing traditional base load plants with it.

      No, you're not. What you are doing is allowing the base load plants to be idle during times the intermittent plants are generating.

      A base load plant must be capable of meeting the grid's minimum demand 24x7x365. Wind and especially solar can never guarantee that.

    2. Re:title seems to be misleading, at best. by Dan+East · · Score: 4, Informative

      Two problems with your statements.

      The first is the terminology. Instead of referring to them as "baseload" plants, they are now calling them "portable dispatchable power" and they're in the form of natural gas turbines. So yes, there is still backup "baseload" power generation that is non-renewable. The fact that it may be smaller scale and distributed does not change the fact that it is still non-renewable, serves the baseload needs, and runs off of fossil fuel. They might be more efficient in that they can spin up faster and don't cost as much as idling, say, a nuclear power plant, is the only difference.

      The second is that Germany falls back on power from France and the Czech Republic (both mainly nuclear power), for example, to meet their baseload needs. They have a crutch to lean on whenever, as they are totally surrounded by other countries whose grids they are connected to. How's that supposed to work in a country like the USA? Grab power from Mexico when needed? LOL You try to look at Germany as a stand-alone shining example of what the USA is supposed to be, yet when you take Europe as a whole you see that it isn't technically possible for it all to generate power like Germany does.

      I just think it's funny how your post talks so adamantly how baseload generation can totally go away but you talk around it and never say how that is supposed to happen.

      --
      Better known as 318230.
    3. Re:title seems to be misleading, at best. by FirstOne · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't buy into the projected increasing amounts of coal usage. As the Chinese discovered, one pays a heavy price burning coal, (pollution of water, soil, air), and India will soon learn this lesson first hand.

      Coal in the USA maybe a NOP by 2027, where coal generation peaked near 49% (2007), 33%(2015) and is still dropping like a rock 31% (April 2016).

      As for the so called base-load argument, is a fool's argument, eventually we will need to use renewable's to provide more than 150% of our overall demand, using excess energy production to put Carbon back into the ground. Preferably in the form of Methane(CH4), which we can later tap to stabilize the grid when needed.

      .

  2. Re:We should speed this up by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 3, Informative

    And smelting and refineing the materials for a coal plant or a water turbine, is green?

    Actually in civilized countries processing of raw materials is regulated and basicaly non poluting.

    Solar Panels don't use rare earthes btw ...

    --
    Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.