In This Issue
- Flanigan’s Eco-Logic: The Power of the Sun
- SAF – Sustainable Aviation Fuel
- Hydrogen-Powered Planes
- UGES
- Electric Vehicle Updates
- Floating Offshore Wind Shot
- Cigarette-But Accountability
- Flanigan’s Ego-Logic Podcast Updates
Flanigan’s Eco-Logic: The Power of the Sun
Let’s talk about 5% and the vast solar potential that will power our future!
Solar energy has just topped 5% of electricity generation in the United States. That’s a good step. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the U.S. Department of Energy, produces detailed monthly and annual reports. The final 2022 issue of Electric Power Monthly covers the first ten months of 2022. During that time frame, renewables – made up of biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, and wind – provided 22.6% of the nation’s electricity. Renewables out-produced both coal and nuclear.
Renewable electricity generation increased by 14.26%. This compares to all other forms of power generation combined which increased by 3.14%. Wind increased by 16.86%; geothermal by 6.45%. Large and small-scale solar systems are included in the data. All forms of solar increased by 26.23%, raising solar’s share of the national total to just above 5%… 5.05% as reported by EIA. Growing yes, but still paltry when compared to the potential of the sun.
We’ve all heard this: There’s as much solar energy striking the Earth every hour as is consumed by all humans worldwide in a year. The potential is huge: 430 quintillion joules of incoming energy in an hour versus 410 quintillion joules used by humanity throughout the entire year. So 5.05% feels like we’re just scratching the surface of solar’s potential.
The sun abounds and provides free energy. It just needs to be captured. Where to do so? On rooftops of our homes, businesses, and schools, and utility-scale systems in the desert. EcoMotion says… all of the above! The U.S. DOE notes that with the falling prices of solar, solar PV will account for 33% of U.S. generation by 2050. That’s good. Clearly we have a lot of headroom… a lot of solar to deploy to get from five to 33%.
There is huge potential for solar, on rooftops, carports, and in ground-mount configurations. A National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) study focused on the solar potential from rooftop solar on low-to-moderate income households. Of the 116.9 million households analyzed for orientation and shading, 67.2 million were deemed suitable for solar, able to generate nearly 1,000 TWh annually. That’s a fourth of our nation’s annual consumption.
Then there is solar in unusual places… like “floatovoltaics,” floating systems that have been deployed in Asia as well as Kenya, and the Maldives powering an idyllic resort. Some ventures are working to put solar arrays in space, then beaming power to Earth. Years ago I met the Brusaws. Julie and Scott are Idaho-based and have a company called Solar Roadways. Its mission is to incorporate solar into roadways. And the potential is huge! Their prototype roadway materials and systems – supported by government grants – are able to withstand the pressure of fully loaded semis rolling over them.
Solar Roadways envisions that all surfaces that are walked upon and driven upon, can be put to use as power plants. This includes city streets, highways, parking lots, driveways, tarmacs, plazas, bike paths, and more. Solar Roadways suggests that if every walkable and driveable surface were paved with their embedded panels, the resulting power output would be three times the power generation requirement of the entire country.
There are lots of opportunities for solar and means to get beyond 5% by an order of magnitude. My great friend Michael Totten posted an Energy Brain Trust item that reminds us of the potential of solar in transmission rights of ways. These are unused land areas that are often well suited for power generation, given the link to transmission. Fully flexing that strategy would fulfill 20% of the nation’s annual consumption. Let’s back into this finding:
In 2011, the Institute for Local Self Reliance calculated that there are 155,000 miles of high voltage transmission lines in the United States. The study assumed 150-foot rights of way, and that only half of the area could be used for solar. Based on an assumed 275 MW of solar potential per square mile, there would be enough room for 600,000 MW of capacity. Cincinnati’s solar insolation was used as a proxy value for the country, resulting in 720 billion kWh of transmission-corridor solar potential.
At EcoMotion, we envision a solar/hydrogen future. We envision solar in all the configurations discussed, and with an equal number of ownership models. We’re proud to be part of the solar movement, tapping the vast power of the sun, for a sustainable future. Do we have enough carbon-free energy? There is no question that the answer is strongly affirmative!