Jil
1 kW
TheBeastie said:The Topaz 25km2 solar farm put out 1,301 GWh 2015 (its best year ever!) Numbers from Wikipedia which come directly from the US http://eia.gov official website.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Topaz_Solar_Farm#Statistics
Energy used in the USA ( 2013 ) 25,451,000 GWh (or 25,451TWh). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_in_the_United_States#Current_consumption
So its 25,451,000GWh / 1,301GWh = 19,562 Topaz-solar-farms required. (19,562_solar_farms x 25km2) = 489,050km2
So it's a total solar farm size of 489,050km2 or 188,823 square miles.
Roughly the size of Texas, but wait this is only part of the problem.
Every time you see a meme that seems like baloney it probably is. If you do the numbers for battery storage that's when the numbers and costs become truly mind boggling.
While Topaz took 3 years to build which is pretty fast, for the whole USA it would at the same build rate take 58,686 years but of course we could get more people on it and crank out more solar panel factories to make more panels, how about it magically being built 10 times faster? then that means it would only take 5,868 years for the whole of the USA alone to build its clean solar based energy future (excluding energy storage etc).
Their are so many problems to this and the biggest one is how poor the human brain can function in the face of bias, the lust for seemingly free energy over-rides peoples logic part of the brain, I can only assume some folks would still look at the above data and think yeah we can do that!
Building a structure this large is going to take at least a 1000+ years and thats OK? What about the cost, this solar farm was $2.4billion. 19,562_topaz_solar_farms x $2.4b
Topaz Solar farm Wikipedia page quote Construction cost $2.4 billion
So its 46,948,800,000,000 thats $46 Trillion dollars for a USA solar farm.
If you do numbers for energy storage costs that's when it gets even more insane, the reason why most renewable energy projects dont have energy storage because the costs are completely unviable.
EIA Topaz Solar farm generation numbers for Topaz Solar Farm https://www.eia.gov/electricity/data/browser/#/plant/57695
OK let's challenge this with other numbers (from real world, I work in the solar industry).
To provide the ENTIRE WORLD with solar electricity for 50% of all its FINAL ENERGY consumption (were are talking about all forms of energy, not only electricity, so it would be assuming that 50% of the final energy is used as electricity, which is much more than the reality today), all you need is 0.3% of the land surface on Earth. Or 3% of the Sahara desert.
Even if we were talking of 100% of our final energy from solar power, it would be 0.6% of the land surface on Earth, 6% of the Sahara desert. Huge, as is the challenge of supplying the humankind with sustainable energy on the long term, but technically doable with very minimal impact on land resources.
Quick demo :
Final energy consumption over one year, entire world (IEA 2014) : 9425 MTOE = 110 000 billions kWh
Reference solar plant, located in south-west France (which is conservative, as you can produce in North Africa, South USA, Mexico, Australia, for example, up to 2 times more per hectare) : 1 MW per hectare, annual production = 1200 kWh/kW = 1 200 000 kWh/hectare (average over 25 years, taking into account a small decrease of you panel performance of 0.5% per year).
With this typical photovoltaic plant, to provide 50% of the world final energy consumption yearly (55 000 billions kWh), you need 45 000 GW of solar power installed, or 450 000 km2, or 0.31% of the land surface on Earth. Let's add 10% for storage capacity, and it comes to 0.34%.
So the question is not IF solar energy (backed by gas, hydro, wind and some others on a smaller scale) can become the main provider of energy for the world, the question is WHEN
Jil
PS : heating is an important subject, as it is a big part of energy consumption, but globally the part of direct heating in the energy consumption is going to decrease (as electricity has the ability to provide it in many situations, for example with heating pumps)... And solar thermal power is very efficient, and cost competitive (even for industrial heat) with gas in many parts of the world.
PS2 : concerning the availability of materials, there is no shortage issue for photovoltaic power, as 95% of the phovoltaic panels are crystalline silicium, and are made mainly of silicium (which is, roughly, refined sand), aluminium and glass. And no shortage to anticipate with lithium neither.
PS3 : about the rate of construction, don't worry if there is the demand (and the market will provide it) it will not be an issue. The China alone has built 34 GW of PV solar plants last year (it was 0.5 GW in 2010). And it's just the beginning.
PS4 : your reference of the Topaze solar project is real, but outdated and absolutely not representative. In particular with silicum panels you need less space, and there is also a trend (at least in Europe) to concentrate the solar farms, which is doable with very minimal losses (a few percents) because of inter-rows shading. Topaz is typically a project that consumes A LOT of space par kW installed. In France a 300 MWp project has recently been achieved on a 2.5 km2 land (https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrale_solaire_de_Cestas). Frankly, 25 km2 for a 550 MWp solar farm like Topaz, I just do not understand how they have been able to use so much space.