Gas Plants Will Get Crushed by Wind, Solar by 2035, Study Says
By 2035, it will be more expensive to run 90% of gas plants being proposed in the U.S. than it will be to build new wind and solar farms equipped with storage systems, according to the report Monday from the Rocky Mountain Institute. It will happen so quickly that gas plants now on the drawing boards will become uneconomical before their owners finish paying for them, the study said.
The authors of the study say they analyzed the costs of construction, fuel and anticipated operations for 68 gigawatts of gas plants proposed across the U.S. They compared those costs to building a combination of solar farms, wind plants and battery systems that, together with conservation efforts, could supply the same amount of electricity and keep the grid stable.
As gas plants lose their edge in power markets, the economics of pipelines will suffer, too, RMI said in a separate study Monday. Even lines now in the planning stages could soon be out of the money, the report found.
Hopefully our electrical distribution grid will still work.
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday September 12 2019, @01:06PM (2 children)
The TARP stimulus Congress passed in 2009 was $700 billion and it was a one-time deal. Stopping oil buying would be half of a TARP stimulus every year.
That's a shit ton of jobs and a really excellent amount of money to not give to Saudi-funded madrassas.
Washington DC delenda est.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Thursday September 12 2019, @05:17PM (1 child)
Back before climate change was "on the radar" I thought the US was actually pretty smart: trading essentially worthless concepts (American dollars) for foreign oil, while we kept our fossil fuel reserves in the ground. Then the Saudis give us back umpteen millions of dollars in exchange for some F-16 fighter-jet toys and similar trinkets.
When it really hits the fan, dollars will just be broken promises.
🌻🌻 [google.com]
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Saturday September 14 2019, @03:51PM
That's astute. It will be quite an adjustment, then, but there are quite bright sides to it: the perceived value of bankers, politicians, and lawyers will drop to zero, or less.
Washington DC delenda est.