Misguided Incentives
At the heart of the solar debate in Germany is something called a "feed-in tariff" or FIT. It requires utilities to buy the output of qualifying solar power installations at a guaranteed fixed price well above the prevailing price in the power market. What's unique about the FIT compared to incentives such as the US federal renewable Production Tax Credit of 2.1 cents per kWh is that the funds to pay this green premium don't come from the government but from each utility's ratepayers. In other words, it is a mechanism for redistributing wealth from utility customers to the owners of solar installations, whether the affected ratepayers receive any solar power or not. The paradox of the FIT is that it makes the most sense when a technology is at its very earliest stages, producing so little energy that the cost to average utility customers is just pennies a month. The more solar power is produced and bought at inflated prices, the higher utility bills go and the less competitive the entire economy becomes.
So far, this just sounds like a political matter. Germany decided to nurture a large industry to build and install solar products and chose to pay for it by sending the bill to utility customers every month. That might even make a certain amount of practical sense, if not for two facts. First, the subsidy remains extravagantly generous, even after having been significantly reduced in recent years. It currently stands at a range of 34-43 €cent/kWh, depending on the kind of installation involved. At current exchange rates, that equates to $0.50-0.635/kWh. A recent study comparing levelized power costs for a variety of power technologies puts the cost of unsubsidized solar power between $0.26-.32 for the crystalline silicon photovoltaic cells that most German solar firms produce, based on an average capacity factor above 20%. After adjusting for Germany's much poorer solar intensity, the cost of solar power might rise to as much as $0.40/kWh, still well below the level of the FIT. This makes un-sunny Germany a remarkably attractive place to sell solar panels, and German companies haven't been the only ones to notice this. Suddenly the FIT looks like a means for Germans to subsidize Chinese solar firms, and that is not going down quite so well. More importantly for the success of Germany's solar industrial policy, the Journal indicates that the head of one of the country's largest solar module manufacturers is now arguing that German suppliers will not become efficient enough to compete in the global market for solar panels unless they are weaned off such generous support.
The high effective cost of the emissions reductions these subsidies are buying ought to be of equal concern to German policy makers. Even if you assume that each kWh of power generated by FIT-subsidized solar panels backs out a kWh generated from coal, the extra premium over the cost of other low-emission power sources such as wind is enormous. The difference in the average solar FIT vs. Germany's FIT for offshore wind of 13 €cent/kWh ($0.19/kWh) yields an effective cost of CO2 reduction from solar of about $400 per ton. That compares to a current price for emissions credits on the European Climate Exchange of around $19/ton CO2. The more you pay for reducing emissions, the less of them you can afford to reduce, even in a prosperous country like Germany.
At the end of the day, German politicians appear to have spent billions of Euros of German consumers' and businesses' money to build a solar industry that has thrived on the installation of high-costs solar panels in one of the least suitable countries for solar power imaginable, and that may not be able to compete internationally without drastic restructuring. This initiative has also failed dismally as climate policy, purchasing less than 5% of the emissions reductions that could have been bought had this money been spent on other, more cost-effective power technologies or on energy efficiency. The further irony is that much of the German investment in solar technology to date would have to be written off should it turn out that the current generation of technology can't be made cheaply enough under any circumstances, and crystalline silicon cells ultimately give way to cells relying on non-silicon thin-film techniques or novel nanotech-based designs. These are the perils of industrial policy masquerading as environmental policy, and it is hardly a winning case for the application of a similar FIT in the US.
Link to original post
Other Posts by Geoffrey Styles
British Columbia Aims to Sell Cleaner LNG - February 8, 2012
Cleantech Firms Paying the Price for Subsidies - February 2, 2012
D.C. Auto Show Focused on Efficiency - February 1, 2012
State of the Union Addresses All-of-the-Above Energy - January 25, 2012
Applying Innovation to Oil & Gas - January 23, 2012
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CharlesBarton said:
Is it to much to hope that we are seeing the beginning of a return to sanity in Germany?Geoffrey Styles said:
Well, to whatever extent the election just held was a referendum on the plans of the SDP and Green Party to shut down the nuclear power plants--on which they campaigned--the German electorate seems to have narrowly rejected that choice.CharlesBarton said:
Geoff, You have just laid out a truely incredible story. And you have not even mentioned how close Germwny has come to a shutdown of the nuclear power industry as a matter of German national policy. Wouldn't it be fair to call German national energy policy, dictated by the SPD and the German Greens, as utterly insane? How could any sane person believe that it would be possible for Germany to obrain a significant percentage of its winter electricity from solar generation facilities, or that a co0mbination of wind and solar could serve as a base electrical source for Germany? How could the Germans believe that replacing carbon free nuclear with carbon emitting coal and gas powered power plants, would be good energy policy? Who lied to the German people about this? Who failed to warn them? Why did Germasn politicians and the German Media make it plain. Wgy have not more energy collective writers written stories about how disasterously wrong headed, German Energy policy has been? Thers are questions which competent journalists and energy inforemation professionals should be asking.Geoffrey Styles said:
That would be highly likely in the US, but I didn't know enough about the German dispatch curve to make that assumption. Of course if the generation displaced by solar is from gas, the implied cost of carbon abatement would be even higher.BillWoods said:
"Even if you assume that each kWh of power generated by FIT-subsidized solar panels backs out a kWh generated from coal, ..."Isn't it more likely that solar power and wind replace natural gas?
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