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Cost of electricity by source
The cost of electricity generated by different sources is a calculation of the cost of generating electricity at
the point of connection to a load or electricity grid. It includes the initial capital, discount rate, as well as the
costs of continuous operation, fuel, and maintenance. This type of calculation assists policy makers,
researchers and others to guide discussions and decision making
Cost factors
While calculating costs, several internal cost factors have to be considered. The use of "costs," which is not the
actual selling price, since this can be affected by a variety of factors such as subsidies and taxes :
Capital costs (including waste disposal and decommissioning costs for nuclear energy) - tend to be low
for fossil fuel power stations; high for wind turbines, solar PV; very high for waste to
energy, wave and tidal, solar thermal, and nuclear.
Fuel costs - high for fossil fuel and biomass sources, low for nuclear, and zero for many renewables.
Factors such as the costs of waste (and associated issues) and different insurance costs are not included
in the following: Works power, own use or parasitic load - that is, the portion of generated power actually
used to run the stations pumps and fans has to be allowed for.
To evaluate the total cost of production of electricity, the streams of costs are converted to a net present
value using the time value of money. These costs are all brought together using discounted cash flow.
The marginal cost of production at very low levels of output should be relatively low. Small amount of wind due
to nature would result in very low levels of output. However, the wind turbine is the initial investment of
producing wind energy; therefore, once the turbine has been built, not much money will be invested into
producing wind energy other than maintenance. Having a very low level of output means the turbines have
already been built, but since wind is free, to produce an extra unit of energy solely depends on nature, which in
this case, wind is free. Therefore, the marginal cost would be relatively low due to the fact that wind, the energy
source is free and the maintenance of the turbines would be relatively low. Wind power normally has a low
marginal cost (zero fuel costs) and therefore enters near the bottom of the supply curve. This shifts the supply
curve to the right, resulting in a lower power price, depending on the price elasticity of the power demand. In
general, the price of power is expected to be lower during periods with high wind than in periods with low wind.
As mentioned above, there may be congestions in power transmission, especially during periods with high wind
power generation. Thus, if the available transmission capacity cannot cope with the required power export, the
supply area is separated from the rest of the power market and constitutes its own pricing area. With an excess
supply of power in this area, conventional power plants have to reduce their production, since it is generally not
possible to limit the power production of wind. In most cases, this will lead to a lower power price in this sub-
market.
Calculations
Levelized Energy Cost (LEC, also known as Levelised Cost of Energy, abbreviated as LCOE ) is the price at
which electricity must be generated from a specific source to break even over the lifetime of the project. It is an
economic assessment of the cost of the energy-generating system including all the costs over its lifetime: initial
investment, operations and maintenance, cost of fuel, cost of capital, and is very useful in calculating the costs
of generation from different sources.
It can be defined in a single formula as
where
= Average lifetime levelized electricity generation cost
= Investment expenditures in the year t
= Operations and maintenance expenditures in the year t
= Fuel expenditures in the year t
= Electricity generation in the year t
= Discount rate
= Life of the system
Typically LECs are calculated over 20 to 40 year lifetimes, and are given in the units of currency per kilowatt-
hour, megawatt-hour. However, care should be taken in comparing different LCOE studies and the sources of
the information as the LCOE for a given energy source is highly dependent on the assumptions, financing
terms and technological deployment analyzed.]
In particular, assumption of Capacity factor has significant
impact on the calculation of LCOE. For example, Solar PV may have a Capacity Factor as low as 10%
depending on location. Thus, a key requirement for the analysis is a clear statement of the applicability of the
analysis based on justified assumptions.[8]
System boundaries[edit source | editbeta]
When comparing LECs for alternative systems, it is very important to define the boundaries of the 'system' and
the costs that are included in it. For example, should transmissions lines and distribution systems be included
in the cost? Typically only the costs of connecting the generating source into the transmission system is
included as a cost of the generator. But in some cases wholesale upgrade of the Grid is needed. Careful
thought has to be given to whether or not these costs should be included in the cost of power.
Should R&D, tax, and environmental impact studies be included? Should the costs of impacts on public health
and environmental damage be included? Should the costs of government subsidies be included in the
calculated LEC?
Discount rate[edit source | editbeta]
Another key issue is the decision about the value of the discount rate . The value that is chosen for can
often 'weigh' the decision towards one option or another, so the basis for choosing the discount must clearly be
carefully evaluated. See internal rate of return. The appropriate discount rate is not the actual cost of capital,
but typically 3.5%.[9]
Marginal cost of electricity[edit source | editbeta]
A more telling economic assessment might be the marginal cost of electricity. This value would serve the
purpose of comparing the added cost of increasing electricity generation by one unit from different sources of
electricity generation (see Merit Order).
Estimates[edit source | editbeta]
US Department of Energy estimates[edit source | editbeta]
The tables below list the estimated cost of electricity by source for plants entering service in 2017. The tables
are from a January 23, 2012 report of the Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) called "Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources in the Annual Energy Outlook 2012".[10]
Total System Levelized Cost (the rightmost column) gives the dollar cost per megawatt-hour that must
be charged over time in order to pay for the total cost. These calculations reflect an adjustment to account
for the high level of carbon dioxide produced by coal plants. From the EIA report:
"a 3-percentage point increase in the cost of capital is added when evaluating investments in
greenhouse gas (GHG) intensive technologies like coal-fired power and coal-to-liquids (CTL) plants
without carbon control and sequestration (CCS). While the 3-percentage point adjustment is somewhat
arbitrary, in levelized cost terms its impact is similar to that of a $15 per metric ton of carbon dioxide
(CO2) emissions fee. ... As a result, the levelized capital costs of coal-fired plants without CCS are
higher than would otherwise be expected."[10]
No tax credits or incentives are incorporated in the tables. From the EIA report (emphasis added):
"Levelized cost represents the present value of the total cost of building and operating a generating
plant over an assumed financial life and duty cycle, converted to equal annual payments and
expressed in terms of real dollars to remove the impact of inflation. Levelized cost reflects overnight
capital cost, fuel cost, fixed and variable O&M cost, financing costs, and an assumed utilization
rate for each plant type. The availability of various incentives including state or federal tax
credits can also impact the calculation of levelized cost. The values shown in the tables below do
not incorporate any such incentives."[10]
Incentives, tax credits, production mandates, etc. are discussed in the overall comprehensive EIA
report: "Annual Energy Outlook 2012".[11][12][13]
Photovoltaics (solar PV) can be used both by distributed residential or commercial users and utility
scale power plants. The costs shown are for utility scale photovoltaic power plants.[10]
Estimated Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources, 2017[10]
U.S. Average Levelized Cost for Plants Entering Service in 2017
(2010 USD/MWh)
Plant Type
Capacit
y
Factor
(%)
Levelize
d
Capital
Cost
Fixed
O&
M
Variable
O&M
(includin
g
fuel)
Transmissio
n
Investment
Total
System
Levelize
d
Cost
Conventional Coal 85 65.8 4.0 28.6 1.2 99.6
Advanced Coal 85 75.2 6.6 29.2 1.2 112.2
Advanced Coal
with CCS
85 93.3 9.3 36.8 1.2 140.7
Natural Gas Fired
NG:
Conventiona
l Combined
87 17.5 1.9 48.0 1.2 68.6
Estimated Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources, 2017[10]
U.S. Average Levelized Cost for Plants Entering Service in 2017
(2010 USD/MWh)
Plant Type
Capacit
y
Factor
(%)
Levelize
d
Capital
Cost
Fixed
O&
M
Variable
O&M
(includin
g
fuel)
Transmissio
n
Investment
Total
System
Levelize
d
Cost
Cycle
NG:
Advanced
Combined
Cycle
87 17.9 1.9 44.4 1.2 65.5
NG:
Advanced
CC with
CCS
87 34.9 4.0 52.7 1.2 92.8
NG:
Conventiona
l
Combustion
Turbine
30 46.0 2.7 79.9 3.6 132.0
NG:
Advanced
Combustion
Turbine
30 31.7 2.6 67.5 3.6 105.3
Advanced Nuclear 90 88.8 11.3 11.6 1.1 112.7
Geothermal 92 76.6 11.9 9.6 1.5 99.6
Biomass 83 56.8 13.8 48.3 1.3 120.2
Estimated Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources, 2017[10]
U.S. Average Levelized Cost for Plants Entering Service in 2017
(2010 USD/MWh)
Plant Type
Capacit
y
Factor
(%)
Levelize
d
Capital
Cost
Fixed
O&
M
Variable
O&M
(includin
g
fuel)
Transmissio
n
Investment
Total
System
Levelize
d
Cost
Wind1
34 83.3 9.7 0.0 3.7 96.8
Solar PV1,2
25 144.9 7.7 0.0 4.2 156.9
Solar Thermal1
20 204.7 40.1 0.0 6.2 251.0
Hydro1
53 76.9 4.0 6.0 2.1 89.9
1
Non-dispatchable (Hydro is dispatchable within a season, but nondispatchable overall-limited by site
and season)
2
Costs are expressed in terms of net AC power available to the grid for the installed capacity
Regional Variation in Levelized Costs of New Generation Resources, 2017[11]
Plant Type
Range for Total System Levelized Costs
(2010 USD/MWh)
Minimum Average Maximum
Conventional Coal 90.1 99.6 116.3
Advanced Coal 103.9 112.2 126.1
Advanced Coal with CCS 129.6 140.7 162.4
Natural Gas Fired
Conventional Combined Cycle 61.8 68.6 88.1
Advanced Combined Cycle 58.9 65.5 83.3
Advanced CC with CCS 82.8 92.8 110.9
Conventional Combustion Turbine 94.6 132.0 164.1
Advanced Combustion Turbine 80.4 105.3 133.0
Advanced Nuclear 108.4 112.7 120.1
Geothermal 85.0 99.6 113.9
Biomass 101.5 120.2 142.8
Wind 78.2 96.8 114.1
Solar PV 122.2 156.9 245.6
Solar Thermal 182.7 251.0 400.7
Hydro[14]
57.8 88.9 147.6
O&M = operation and maintenance.
CC = combined cycle.
CCS = carbon capture and sequestration.
PV = photovoltaics.
GHG = greenhouse gas.
UK 2010 estimates[edit source | editbeta]
In March 2010, a new report on UK levelised generation costs was published by Parsons
Brinckerhoff.[15]
It puts a range on each cost due to various uncertainties. Combined cycle
gas turbines without CO2 capture are not directly comparable to the other low carbon
emission generation technologies in the PB study. The assumptions used in this study are
given in the report.
UK energy costs for different generation technologies in pounds permegawatt hour (2010)
Technology Cost range (£/MWh)[citation needed]
New nuclear 80–105
Onshore wind 80–110
Biomass 60–120
Natural gas turbines with CO2 capture 60–130
Coal with CO2 capture 100–155
Solar farms 125–180
Offshore wind 150–210
Natural gas turbine, no CO2 capture 55–110
Tidal power 155–390
Divide the above figures by 10 to obtain the price in pence per kilowatt-hour.
More recent UK estimates are the Mott MacDonald study released by DECC in June
2010 [16]
and the Arup study for DECC published in 2011.[17]
French 2011 estimates[edit source | editbeta]
The International Agency for the Energy and EDF have estimated for 2011 the following
costs. For the nuclear power they include the costs due to new safety investments to
upgrade the French nuclear plant after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster; the cost for
those investments is estimated at 4 €/MWh. Concerning the solar power the estimate at 293
€/MWh is for a large plant capable to produce in the range of 50-100 GWh/year located in a
favorable location (such as in Southern Europe). For a small household plant capable to
produce typically around 3 MWh/year the cost is according to the location between 400 and
700 €/MWh. Currently solar power is by far the most expensive renewable source to produce
electricity, although increasing efficiency and longer lifespan of photovoltaic panels together
with reduced production costs could make this source of energy more competitive.
French energy costs for different generation technologies in Euros per megawatt
hour (2011)
Technology Cost (€/MWh)
Hydro power 20
Nuclear 50
Natural gas turbines without CO2 capture 61
Onshore wind 69
Solar farms 293
Analysis from different sources[edit source | editbeta]
█ Conventional oil █ Unconventional oil █ Biofuels █ Coal █ Nuclear █ Wind
Colored vertical lines indicate various historical oil prices. From left to right:
— 1990s average — January 2009 — 1979 peak — 2008 peak
Price of oil per barrel (bbl) at which energy sources are competitive.
Right end of bar is viability without subsidy.
Left end of bar requires regulation or government subsidies.
Wider bars indicate uncertainty.
Source: Financial Times (edit)
A draft report of LECs used by the California Energy Commission is available.[18]
From this
report, the price per MWh for a municipal energy source is shown here:
California levelized energy costs for different generation technologies inUS
dollars per megawatt hour (2007)
Technology Cost (US$/MWh)
Advanced Nuclear 67
Coal 74–88
California levelized energy costs for different generation technologies inUS
dollars per megawatt hour (2007)
Technology Cost (US$/MWh)
Gas 87–346
Geothermal 67
Hydro power 48–86
Wind power 60
Solar 116–312
Biomass 47–117
Fuel Cell 86–111
Wave Power 611
Note that the above figures incorporate tax breaks for the various forms of power plants.
Subsidies range from 0% (for Coal) to 14% (for nuclear) to over 100% (for solar).
The following table gives a selection of LECs from two major government reports from
Australia.[19][20]
Note that these LECs do not include any cost for the greenhouse
gasemissions (such as under carbon tax or emissions trading scenarios) associated with the
different technologies.
Levelised energy costs for different generation technologies in Australian
dollars per megawatt hour(2006)
Technology Cost (AUD/MWh)
Levelised energy costs for different generation technologies in Australian
dollars per megawatt hour(2006)
Technology Cost (AUD/MWh)
Nuclear (to COTS plan)[20]
40–70
Nuclear (to suit site; typical)[20]
75–105
Coal 28–38
Coal: IGCC + CCS 53–98
Coal: supercritical pulverized + CCS 64–106
Open-cycle Gas Turbine 101
Hot fractured rocks 89
Gas: combined cycle 37–54
Gas: combined cycle + CCS 53–93
Small Hydro power 55
Wind power: high capacity factor 63
Solar thermal 85
Biomass 88
Levelised energy costs for different generation technologies in Australian
dollars per megawatt hour(2006)
Technology Cost (AUD/MWh)
Photovoltaics 120
In 1997 the Trade Association for Wind Turbines (Wirtschaftsverband Windkraftwerke e.V. –
WVW) ordered a study into the costs of electricity production in newly constructed
conventional power plants from the Rheinisch-Westfälischen Institute for Economic
Research –RWI). The RWI predicted costs of electricity production per kWh for the basic
load for the year 2010 as follows:[citation needed]
Fuel Cost per kilowatt hour in euro cents.
Nuclear Power 10.7 €ct – 12.4 €ct
Fuel Cost per kilowatt hour in euro cents.
Brown Coal (Lignite) 8.8 €ct – 9.7 €ct
Black Coal (Bituminous) 10.4 €ct – 10.7 €ct
Natural gas 11.8 €ct – 10.6 €ct.
The part of a base load represents approx. 64% of the electricity production in total. The
costs of electricity production for the mid-load and peak load are considerably higher. There
is a mean value for the costs of electricity production for all kinds of conventional electricity
production and load profiles in 2010 which is 10.9 €ct to 11.4 €ct per kWh. The RWI
calculated this on the assumption that the costs of energy production would depend on the
price development of crude oil and that the price of crude oil would be approx. 23 US$ per
barrel in 2010. In fact the crude oil price is about 80 US$ in the beginning of 2010. This
means that the effective costs of conventional electricity production still need to be higher
than estimated by the RWI in the past.
The WVW takes the legislative feed-in-tariff as basis for the costs of electricity production out
of renewable energies because renewable power plants are economically feasible under the
German law (German Renewable Energy Sources Act-EEG).
The following figures arise for the costs of electricity production in newly constructed power
plants in 2010:[citation needed]
Energy source Costs of electricity production in euros per megawatt hour
Nuclear Energy 107.0 – 124.0
Brown Coal 88.0 – 97.0
Black Coal 104.0 – 107.0
Domestic Gas 106.0 – 118.0
Energy source Costs of electricity production in euros per megawatt hour
Wind Energy Onshore 49.7 – 96.1
Wind Energy Offshore 35.0 – 150.0
Hydropower 34.7 – 126.7
Biomass 77.1 – 115.5
Solar Electricity 284.3 – 391.4
Other estimates[edit source | editbeta]
A 2010 study by the Japanese government (pre-Fukushima disaster), called the Energy
White Paper, concluded the cost for kilowatt hour was ¥49 for solar, ¥10 to ¥14 for wind, and
¥5 or ¥6 for nuclear power. Masayoshi Son, an advocate for renewable energy, however,
has pointed out that the government estimates for nuclear power did not include the costs for
reprocessing the fuel or disaster insurance liability. Son estimated that if these costs were
included, the cost of nuclear power was about the same as wind power.[21][22][23]
Beyond the power station terminals, or system costs[edit
source | editbeta]
The raw costs developed from the above analysis are only part of the picture in planning and
costing a large modern power grid. Other considerations are the temporal load profile, i.e.
how load varies second to second, minute to minute, hour to hour, month to month. To meet
the varying load, generally a mix of plant options is needed, and the overall cost of providing
this load is then important. Wind power has poor capacity contribution, so during windless
periods, some form of back up must be provided. All other forms of power generation also
require back up, though to a lesser extent. To meet peak demand on a system, which only
persist for a few hours per year, it is often worth using very cheap to build, but very
expensive to operate plant - for example some large grids also use load shedding coupled
with diesel generators [24]
at peak or extreme conditions - the very high kWh production cost
being justified by not having to build other more expensive capacity and a reduction in the
otherwise continuous and inefficient use of spinning reserve (see Operating reserve).
In the case of wind energy, the additional costs in terms of increased back up and grid
interconnection to allow for diversity of weather and load may be substantial. This is because
wind stops blowing frequently even in large areas at once and for prolonged periods of time.
Some wind advocates have argued that in the pan-European case back up costs are quite
low, resulting in overall wind energy costs about the same as present day
power.[25]
However, such claims are generally considered too optimistic, except possibly for
some marginal increases that, in particular circumstances, may take advantage of the
existing infrastructure.[citation needed]
The cost in the UK of connecting new offshore wind in transmission terms, has been
consistently put by Grid/DECC/Ofgem at £15billion by 2020. This £15b cost does not include
the cost of any new connections to Europe - interconnectors, or a supergrid, as advocated by
some. The £15b cost is the cost of connecting offshore wind farms by cables typically less
than 12 km in length, to the UK's nearest suitable onshore connection point. There are total
forecast onshore transmission costs of connecting various new UK generators by 2020, as
incurred from 2010, of £4.7 billion, by comparison.
When a new plant is being added to a power system or grid, the effects are quite complex -
for example, when wind energy is added to a grid, it has a marginal cost associated with
production of about £20/MWh (most incurred as lumpy but running-related maintenance -
gearbox and bearing failures, for instance, and the cost of associated downtime), and
therefore will always offer cheaper power than fossil plant - this will tend to force the
marginally most expensive plant off the system. A mid range fossil plant, if added, will only
force off those plants that are marginally more expensive. Hence very complex modelling of
whose systems is required to determine the likely costs in practice of a range of power
generating plant options, or the effect of adding a given plant.
With the development of markets, it is extremely difficult for would-be investors to estimate
the likely impacts and cost benefit of an investment in a new plant, hence in free market
electricity systems, there tends to be an incipient shortage of capacity, due to the difficulties
of investors accurately estimating returns, and the need to second guess what competitors
might do.[citation needed]
The Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland commissioned a former Director of
Operations of the British National Grid, Colin Gibson, to produce a report on generation
levelised costs that for the first time would include some of the transmission costs as well as
the generation costs. This was published in December 2011 and is available on the
internet :.[26]
The institution seeks to encourage debate of the issue, and has taken the
unusual step among compilers of such studies of publishing a spreadsheet showing its data
available on the internet :[27]
OECD/NEA Estimates for USA[edit source | editbeta]
Estimated Grid-Level Systems Cost, 2013 (USD/MWh)[28]
Technology Nuclear Coal Gas
Onshore
Wind
Offshore
Wind
Solar
Penetration
Level
10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30%
Backup costs
(adequacy)
0.00 0.00 0.04 0.04 0.00 0.00 5.61 6.14 2.10 6.85 0.00 10.45
Balancing costs 0.16 0.10 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2.00 5.00 2.00 5.00 2.00 5.00
Grid connection 1.56 1.56 1.03 1.03 0.51 0.51 6.50 6.50 15.24 15.24 10.05 10.05
Grid
reinforcement &
extension
0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2.20 2.20 1.18 1.18 2.77 2.77
Total Grid-level
System Costs
1.72 1.67 1.07 1.07 0.51 0.51 16.30 19.84 20.51 28.26 14.82 28.27
External costs of energy sources[edit source | editbeta]
See also: Environmental impact of the energy industry and Economics of new nuclear power
plants
Typically pricing of electricity from various energy sources may not include all external costs
- that is, the costs indirectly borne by society as a whole as a consequence of using that
energy source. These may include enabling costs, environmental impacts or beyond-
insurance accident effects.
The US Energy Information Administration predicts that coal and gas are set to be
continually used to deliver the majority of the world's electricity,[29]
this is expected to result in
the evacuation of millions of homes in low lying areas, and an annual cost of hundreds of
billions of dollars worth of property damage.[30][31][32][33][34][35][36]
Furthermore, with the ongoing process of whole nations being slowly plunged underwater,
due to fossil fuel use,[37]
massive international climate litigation lawsuits against fossil fuel
users are currently beginning in the International Court of Justice.[38][39]
An EU funded research study known as ExternE, or Externalities of Energy, undertaken over
the period of 1995 to 2005 found that the cost of producing electricity from coal or oil would
double over its present value, and the cost of electricity production from gas would increase
by 30% if external costs such as damage to the environment and to human health, from
the particulate matter,nitrogen oxides, chromium VI, river water alkalinity, mercury
poisoning and arsenic emissions produced by these sources, were taken into account. It was
estimated in the study that these external, downstream, fossil fuel costs amount up to 1%-
2% of the EU’s entire Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and this was before the external cost
of global warming from these sources was even included.[40] [41]
Nuclear power has largely worked under an insurance framework that limits or structures
accident liabilities in accordance with the Paris convention on nuclear third-party liability, the
Brussels supplementary convention, and the Vienna convention on civil liability for nuclear
damage[42]
and in the U.S. the Price-Anderson Act. It is often argued that this potential
shortfall in liability represents an external cost not included in the cost of nuclear electricity.
However these beyond-insurance costs for worst case scenarios are not unusual to nuclear
power, as hydroelectric power plants are similarly not fully insured against a catastrophic
event such as the Banqiao Dam disaster, where 11 million people lost their homes and from
30,000 to 200,000 people died, or large dam failures in general. As private insurers base
dam insurance premiums on limited scenarios, major disaster insurance in this sector is
likewise provided by the state.[43]
Also of note is that more modern reactors than those of
the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant vintage, such as the proven Onagawa nuclear
plant design,[44]
demonstrated that it can survive 13 meter high tsunamis and safely shut
down without incident, despite being the closest nuclear plant to the epicenter of the 2011
earthquake and tsunami.[45]
Photovoltaics[edit source | editbeta]
Photovoltaic prices have fallen from $76.67/Watt in 1977 to an estimated $0.74/Watt in 2013,
for crystalline silicon solar cells.[46]
This is seen as evidence supporting Swanson's law, an
observation similar to the famous Moore's Law that states that solar cell prices fall 20% for
every doubling of industry capacity.[46]
As of 2011, the price of PV modules per MW has fallen by 60% since the summer of 2008,
according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimates, putting solar power for the first time
on a competitive footing with the retail price of electricity in a number of sunny countries; an
alternative and consistent price decline figure of 75% from 2007 to 2012 has also been
published,[47]
though it is unclear whether these figures are specific to the United States or
generally global. The levelised cost of electricity (LCOE) from PV is competitive with
conventional electricity sources in an expanding list of geographic regions,[7]
particularly
when the time of generation is included, as electricity is worth more during the day than at
night.[48]
There has been fierce competition in the supply chain, and further improvements in
the levelised cost of energy for solar lie ahead, posing a growing threat to the dominance of
fossil fuel generation sources in the next few years.[49]
As time progresses, renewable energy
technologies generally get cheaper,[50][51]
while fossil fuels generally get more expensive:
The less solar power costs, the more favorably it compares to conventional power,
and the more attractive it becomes to utilities and energy users around the globe.
Utility-scale solar power can now be delivered in California at prices well below
$100/MWh ($0.10/kWh) less than most other peak generators, even those running
on low-cost natural gas. Lower solar module costs also stimulate demand from
consumer markets where the cost of solar compares very favorably to retail electric
rates.[52]
As of 2011, the cost of PV has fallen well below that of nuclear power and is set to fall
further. The average retail price of solar cells as monitored by the Solarbuzz group fell from
$3.50/watt to $2.43/watt over the course of 2011.[53]
For large-scale installations, prices below $1.00/watt were achieved. A module price
of 0.60 Euro/watt (0.78 $/watt) was published for a large scale 5-year deal in April
2012.[54]
In some locations, PV has reached grid parity, which is usually defined as PV production
costs at or below retail electricity prices (though often still above the power station prices for
coal or gas-fired generation without their distribution and other costs). Photovoltaic power is
also generated during a time of day that is close to peak demand (precedes it) in electricity
systems with high use of air conditioning. More generally, it is now evident that, given a
carbon price of $50/ton, which would raise the price of coal-fired power by 5c/kWh, solar PV
will be cost-competitive in most locations. The declining price of PV has been reflected in
rapidly growing installations, totaling about 23 GW in 2011. Although some consolidation is
likely in 2012, due to support cuts in the large markets of Germany and Italy, strong growth
seems likely to continue for the rest of the decade. Already, by one estimate, total investment
in renewables for 2011 exceeded investment in carbon-based electricity generation.[53]
In the case of self consumption payback time is calculated based on how much electricity is
not brought from the grid. Additionally, using PV solar power to charge DC batteries, as used
in Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles and Electric Vehicles, leads to greater efficiencies.
Traditionally, DC generated electricity from solar PV must be converted to AC for buildings,
at an average 10% loss during the conversion. An additional efficiency loss occurs in the
transition back to DC for battery driven devices and vehicles, and using various interest rates
and energy price changes were calculated to find present values that range from $2,057.13
to $8,213.64 (analysis from 2009). [55]
For example in Germany with electricity prices of 0.25 euro/KWh and Insolation of 900
KWh/KW one KWp will save 225 euro per year and with installation cost of 1700 euro/KWp
means that the system will pay back in less than 7 years.[56]
Additional cost factors[edit source | editbeta]
Extraction, emissions, transmission, health[edit source | editbeta]
This calculation does not include wider system costs associated with each type of plant, such
as long distance transmission connections to grids, balancing and reserve costs, and does
not include externalities such as health damage by coal plants, nor the effect of CO2
emissions on the whole biosphere (climate change, ocean
acidification and eutrophication, ocean current shifts), nor decommissioning costs of nuclear
plants(although in the USA, the cost of decommissioning is included in the price of electricity,
as per the Nuclear Waste Policy Act), is therefore not full cost accounting: These types of
items can be explicitly added as necessary depending on the purpose of the calculation. It
has little relation to actual price of power, but assists policy makers and others to guide
discussions and decision making.
These are not minor factors but very significantly affect all responsible power decisions:
Comparisons of life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions show coal, for instance, to be
radically higher in terms of GHGs than any alternative. Accordingly, in the analysis
below, carbon capturedcoal is generally treated as a separate source rather than being
averaged in with other coal.
Other environmental concerns with electricity generation include acid rain, ocean
acidification and effect of coal extraction on watersheds.
Various human health concerns with electricity generation, including asthma and smog,
now dominate decisions in developed nations that incur health care costs publicly.
A Harvard UniversityMedical School study estimates the US health costs of coal alone
at between 300 and 500 billion US dollars annually.[57]
While cost per kWh of transmission varies drastically with distance, the long complex
projects required to clear or even upgrade transmission routes make even attractive new
supplies often uncompetitive with conservation measures (see below), because the
timing of payoff must take the transmission upgrade into account.

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Cost of electricity by source LEC calculation

  • 1. Cost of electricity by source The cost of electricity generated by different sources is a calculation of the cost of generating electricity at the point of connection to a load or electricity grid. It includes the initial capital, discount rate, as well as the costs of continuous operation, fuel, and maintenance. This type of calculation assists policy makers, researchers and others to guide discussions and decision making Cost factors While calculating costs, several internal cost factors have to be considered. The use of "costs," which is not the actual selling price, since this can be affected by a variety of factors such as subsidies and taxes : Capital costs (including waste disposal and decommissioning costs for nuclear energy) - tend to be low for fossil fuel power stations; high for wind turbines, solar PV; very high for waste to energy, wave and tidal, solar thermal, and nuclear. Fuel costs - high for fossil fuel and biomass sources, low for nuclear, and zero for many renewables. Factors such as the costs of waste (and associated issues) and different insurance costs are not included in the following: Works power, own use or parasitic load - that is, the portion of generated power actually used to run the stations pumps and fans has to be allowed for. To evaluate the total cost of production of electricity, the streams of costs are converted to a net present value using the time value of money. These costs are all brought together using discounted cash flow. The marginal cost of production at very low levels of output should be relatively low. Small amount of wind due to nature would result in very low levels of output. However, the wind turbine is the initial investment of producing wind energy; therefore, once the turbine has been built, not much money will be invested into producing wind energy other than maintenance. Having a very low level of output means the turbines have already been built, but since wind is free, to produce an extra unit of energy solely depends on nature, which in this case, wind is free. Therefore, the marginal cost would be relatively low due to the fact that wind, the energy source is free and the maintenance of the turbines would be relatively low. Wind power normally has a low marginal cost (zero fuel costs) and therefore enters near the bottom of the supply curve. This shifts the supply
  • 2. curve to the right, resulting in a lower power price, depending on the price elasticity of the power demand. In general, the price of power is expected to be lower during periods with high wind than in periods with low wind. As mentioned above, there may be congestions in power transmission, especially during periods with high wind power generation. Thus, if the available transmission capacity cannot cope with the required power export, the supply area is separated from the rest of the power market and constitutes its own pricing area. With an excess supply of power in this area, conventional power plants have to reduce their production, since it is generally not possible to limit the power production of wind. In most cases, this will lead to a lower power price in this sub- market. Calculations Levelized Energy Cost (LEC, also known as Levelised Cost of Energy, abbreviated as LCOE ) is the price at which electricity must be generated from a specific source to break even over the lifetime of the project. It is an economic assessment of the cost of the energy-generating system including all the costs over its lifetime: initial investment, operations and maintenance, cost of fuel, cost of capital, and is very useful in calculating the costs of generation from different sources. It can be defined in a single formula as where = Average lifetime levelized electricity generation cost = Investment expenditures in the year t = Operations and maintenance expenditures in the year t = Fuel expenditures in the year t = Electricity generation in the year t = Discount rate = Life of the system Typically LECs are calculated over 20 to 40 year lifetimes, and are given in the units of currency per kilowatt- hour, megawatt-hour. However, care should be taken in comparing different LCOE studies and the sources of the information as the LCOE for a given energy source is highly dependent on the assumptions, financing terms and technological deployment analyzed.] In particular, assumption of Capacity factor has significant impact on the calculation of LCOE. For example, Solar PV may have a Capacity Factor as low as 10% depending on location. Thus, a key requirement for the analysis is a clear statement of the applicability of the analysis based on justified assumptions.[8]
  • 3. System boundaries[edit source | editbeta] When comparing LECs for alternative systems, it is very important to define the boundaries of the 'system' and the costs that are included in it. For example, should transmissions lines and distribution systems be included in the cost? Typically only the costs of connecting the generating source into the transmission system is included as a cost of the generator. But in some cases wholesale upgrade of the Grid is needed. Careful thought has to be given to whether or not these costs should be included in the cost of power. Should R&D, tax, and environmental impact studies be included? Should the costs of impacts on public health and environmental damage be included? Should the costs of government subsidies be included in the calculated LEC? Discount rate[edit source | editbeta] Another key issue is the decision about the value of the discount rate . The value that is chosen for can often 'weigh' the decision towards one option or another, so the basis for choosing the discount must clearly be carefully evaluated. See internal rate of return. The appropriate discount rate is not the actual cost of capital, but typically 3.5%.[9] Marginal cost of electricity[edit source | editbeta] A more telling economic assessment might be the marginal cost of electricity. This value would serve the purpose of comparing the added cost of increasing electricity generation by one unit from different sources of electricity generation (see Merit Order). Estimates[edit source | editbeta] US Department of Energy estimates[edit source | editbeta] The tables below list the estimated cost of electricity by source for plants entering service in 2017. The tables are from a January 23, 2012 report of the Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) called "Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources in the Annual Energy Outlook 2012".[10] Total System Levelized Cost (the rightmost column) gives the dollar cost per megawatt-hour that must be charged over time in order to pay for the total cost. These calculations reflect an adjustment to account for the high level of carbon dioxide produced by coal plants. From the EIA report: "a 3-percentage point increase in the cost of capital is added when evaluating investments in greenhouse gas (GHG) intensive technologies like coal-fired power and coal-to-liquids (CTL) plants without carbon control and sequestration (CCS). While the 3-percentage point adjustment is somewhat arbitrary, in levelized cost terms its impact is similar to that of a $15 per metric ton of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions fee. ... As a result, the levelized capital costs of coal-fired plants without CCS are higher than would otherwise be expected."[10]
  • 4. No tax credits or incentives are incorporated in the tables. From the EIA report (emphasis added): "Levelized cost represents the present value of the total cost of building and operating a generating plant over an assumed financial life and duty cycle, converted to equal annual payments and expressed in terms of real dollars to remove the impact of inflation. Levelized cost reflects overnight capital cost, fuel cost, fixed and variable O&M cost, financing costs, and an assumed utilization rate for each plant type. The availability of various incentives including state or federal tax credits can also impact the calculation of levelized cost. The values shown in the tables below do not incorporate any such incentives."[10] Incentives, tax credits, production mandates, etc. are discussed in the overall comprehensive EIA report: "Annual Energy Outlook 2012".[11][12][13] Photovoltaics (solar PV) can be used both by distributed residential or commercial users and utility scale power plants. The costs shown are for utility scale photovoltaic power plants.[10] Estimated Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources, 2017[10] U.S. Average Levelized Cost for Plants Entering Service in 2017 (2010 USD/MWh) Plant Type Capacit y Factor (%) Levelize d Capital Cost Fixed O& M Variable O&M (includin g fuel) Transmissio n Investment Total System Levelize d Cost Conventional Coal 85 65.8 4.0 28.6 1.2 99.6 Advanced Coal 85 75.2 6.6 29.2 1.2 112.2 Advanced Coal with CCS 85 93.3 9.3 36.8 1.2 140.7 Natural Gas Fired NG: Conventiona l Combined 87 17.5 1.9 48.0 1.2 68.6
  • 5. Estimated Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources, 2017[10] U.S. Average Levelized Cost for Plants Entering Service in 2017 (2010 USD/MWh) Plant Type Capacit y Factor (%) Levelize d Capital Cost Fixed O& M Variable O&M (includin g fuel) Transmissio n Investment Total System Levelize d Cost Cycle NG: Advanced Combined Cycle 87 17.9 1.9 44.4 1.2 65.5 NG: Advanced CC with CCS 87 34.9 4.0 52.7 1.2 92.8 NG: Conventiona l Combustion Turbine 30 46.0 2.7 79.9 3.6 132.0 NG: Advanced Combustion Turbine 30 31.7 2.6 67.5 3.6 105.3 Advanced Nuclear 90 88.8 11.3 11.6 1.1 112.7 Geothermal 92 76.6 11.9 9.6 1.5 99.6 Biomass 83 56.8 13.8 48.3 1.3 120.2
  • 6. Estimated Levelized Cost of New Generation Resources, 2017[10] U.S. Average Levelized Cost for Plants Entering Service in 2017 (2010 USD/MWh) Plant Type Capacit y Factor (%) Levelize d Capital Cost Fixed O& M Variable O&M (includin g fuel) Transmissio n Investment Total System Levelize d Cost Wind1 34 83.3 9.7 0.0 3.7 96.8 Solar PV1,2 25 144.9 7.7 0.0 4.2 156.9 Solar Thermal1 20 204.7 40.1 0.0 6.2 251.0 Hydro1 53 76.9 4.0 6.0 2.1 89.9 1 Non-dispatchable (Hydro is dispatchable within a season, but nondispatchable overall-limited by site and season) 2 Costs are expressed in terms of net AC power available to the grid for the installed capacity Regional Variation in Levelized Costs of New Generation Resources, 2017[11] Plant Type Range for Total System Levelized Costs (2010 USD/MWh) Minimum Average Maximum Conventional Coal 90.1 99.6 116.3 Advanced Coal 103.9 112.2 126.1
  • 7. Advanced Coal with CCS 129.6 140.7 162.4 Natural Gas Fired Conventional Combined Cycle 61.8 68.6 88.1 Advanced Combined Cycle 58.9 65.5 83.3 Advanced CC with CCS 82.8 92.8 110.9 Conventional Combustion Turbine 94.6 132.0 164.1 Advanced Combustion Turbine 80.4 105.3 133.0 Advanced Nuclear 108.4 112.7 120.1 Geothermal 85.0 99.6 113.9 Biomass 101.5 120.2 142.8 Wind 78.2 96.8 114.1 Solar PV 122.2 156.9 245.6 Solar Thermal 182.7 251.0 400.7 Hydro[14] 57.8 88.9 147.6 O&M = operation and maintenance. CC = combined cycle. CCS = carbon capture and sequestration.
  • 8. PV = photovoltaics. GHG = greenhouse gas. UK 2010 estimates[edit source | editbeta] In March 2010, a new report on UK levelised generation costs was published by Parsons Brinckerhoff.[15] It puts a range on each cost due to various uncertainties. Combined cycle gas turbines without CO2 capture are not directly comparable to the other low carbon emission generation technologies in the PB study. The assumptions used in this study are given in the report. UK energy costs for different generation technologies in pounds permegawatt hour (2010) Technology Cost range (£/MWh)[citation needed] New nuclear 80–105 Onshore wind 80–110 Biomass 60–120 Natural gas turbines with CO2 capture 60–130 Coal with CO2 capture 100–155 Solar farms 125–180 Offshore wind 150–210 Natural gas turbine, no CO2 capture 55–110 Tidal power 155–390 Divide the above figures by 10 to obtain the price in pence per kilowatt-hour.
  • 9. More recent UK estimates are the Mott MacDonald study released by DECC in June 2010 [16] and the Arup study for DECC published in 2011.[17] French 2011 estimates[edit source | editbeta] The International Agency for the Energy and EDF have estimated for 2011 the following costs. For the nuclear power they include the costs due to new safety investments to upgrade the French nuclear plant after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster; the cost for those investments is estimated at 4 €/MWh. Concerning the solar power the estimate at 293 €/MWh is for a large plant capable to produce in the range of 50-100 GWh/year located in a favorable location (such as in Southern Europe). For a small household plant capable to produce typically around 3 MWh/year the cost is according to the location between 400 and 700 €/MWh. Currently solar power is by far the most expensive renewable source to produce electricity, although increasing efficiency and longer lifespan of photovoltaic panels together with reduced production costs could make this source of energy more competitive. French energy costs for different generation technologies in Euros per megawatt hour (2011) Technology Cost (€/MWh) Hydro power 20 Nuclear 50 Natural gas turbines without CO2 capture 61 Onshore wind 69 Solar farms 293 Analysis from different sources[edit source | editbeta]
  • 10. █ Conventional oil █ Unconventional oil █ Biofuels █ Coal █ Nuclear █ Wind Colored vertical lines indicate various historical oil prices. From left to right: — 1990s average — January 2009 — 1979 peak — 2008 peak Price of oil per barrel (bbl) at which energy sources are competitive. Right end of bar is viability without subsidy. Left end of bar requires regulation or government subsidies. Wider bars indicate uncertainty. Source: Financial Times (edit) A draft report of LECs used by the California Energy Commission is available.[18] From this report, the price per MWh for a municipal energy source is shown here: California levelized energy costs for different generation technologies inUS dollars per megawatt hour (2007) Technology Cost (US$/MWh) Advanced Nuclear 67 Coal 74–88
  • 11. California levelized energy costs for different generation technologies inUS dollars per megawatt hour (2007) Technology Cost (US$/MWh) Gas 87–346 Geothermal 67 Hydro power 48–86 Wind power 60 Solar 116–312 Biomass 47–117 Fuel Cell 86–111 Wave Power 611 Note that the above figures incorporate tax breaks for the various forms of power plants. Subsidies range from 0% (for Coal) to 14% (for nuclear) to over 100% (for solar). The following table gives a selection of LECs from two major government reports from Australia.[19][20] Note that these LECs do not include any cost for the greenhouse gasemissions (such as under carbon tax or emissions trading scenarios) associated with the different technologies. Levelised energy costs for different generation technologies in Australian dollars per megawatt hour(2006) Technology Cost (AUD/MWh)
  • 12. Levelised energy costs for different generation technologies in Australian dollars per megawatt hour(2006) Technology Cost (AUD/MWh) Nuclear (to COTS plan)[20] 40–70 Nuclear (to suit site; typical)[20] 75–105 Coal 28–38 Coal: IGCC + CCS 53–98 Coal: supercritical pulverized + CCS 64–106 Open-cycle Gas Turbine 101 Hot fractured rocks 89 Gas: combined cycle 37–54 Gas: combined cycle + CCS 53–93 Small Hydro power 55 Wind power: high capacity factor 63 Solar thermal 85 Biomass 88
  • 13. Levelised energy costs for different generation technologies in Australian dollars per megawatt hour(2006) Technology Cost (AUD/MWh) Photovoltaics 120 In 1997 the Trade Association for Wind Turbines (Wirtschaftsverband Windkraftwerke e.V. – WVW) ordered a study into the costs of electricity production in newly constructed conventional power plants from the Rheinisch-Westfälischen Institute for Economic Research –RWI). The RWI predicted costs of electricity production per kWh for the basic load for the year 2010 as follows:[citation needed] Fuel Cost per kilowatt hour in euro cents. Nuclear Power 10.7 €ct – 12.4 €ct
  • 14. Fuel Cost per kilowatt hour in euro cents. Brown Coal (Lignite) 8.8 €ct – 9.7 €ct Black Coal (Bituminous) 10.4 €ct – 10.7 €ct Natural gas 11.8 €ct – 10.6 €ct. The part of a base load represents approx. 64% of the electricity production in total. The costs of electricity production for the mid-load and peak load are considerably higher. There is a mean value for the costs of electricity production for all kinds of conventional electricity production and load profiles in 2010 which is 10.9 €ct to 11.4 €ct per kWh. The RWI calculated this on the assumption that the costs of energy production would depend on the price development of crude oil and that the price of crude oil would be approx. 23 US$ per barrel in 2010. In fact the crude oil price is about 80 US$ in the beginning of 2010. This means that the effective costs of conventional electricity production still need to be higher than estimated by the RWI in the past. The WVW takes the legislative feed-in-tariff as basis for the costs of electricity production out of renewable energies because renewable power plants are economically feasible under the German law (German Renewable Energy Sources Act-EEG). The following figures arise for the costs of electricity production in newly constructed power plants in 2010:[citation needed] Energy source Costs of electricity production in euros per megawatt hour Nuclear Energy 107.0 – 124.0 Brown Coal 88.0 – 97.0 Black Coal 104.0 – 107.0 Domestic Gas 106.0 – 118.0
  • 15. Energy source Costs of electricity production in euros per megawatt hour Wind Energy Onshore 49.7 – 96.1 Wind Energy Offshore 35.0 – 150.0 Hydropower 34.7 – 126.7 Biomass 77.1 – 115.5 Solar Electricity 284.3 – 391.4 Other estimates[edit source | editbeta] A 2010 study by the Japanese government (pre-Fukushima disaster), called the Energy White Paper, concluded the cost for kilowatt hour was ¥49 for solar, ¥10 to ¥14 for wind, and ¥5 or ¥6 for nuclear power. Masayoshi Son, an advocate for renewable energy, however, has pointed out that the government estimates for nuclear power did not include the costs for reprocessing the fuel or disaster insurance liability. Son estimated that if these costs were included, the cost of nuclear power was about the same as wind power.[21][22][23] Beyond the power station terminals, or system costs[edit source | editbeta] The raw costs developed from the above analysis are only part of the picture in planning and costing a large modern power grid. Other considerations are the temporal load profile, i.e. how load varies second to second, minute to minute, hour to hour, month to month. To meet the varying load, generally a mix of plant options is needed, and the overall cost of providing this load is then important. Wind power has poor capacity contribution, so during windless periods, some form of back up must be provided. All other forms of power generation also require back up, though to a lesser extent. To meet peak demand on a system, which only persist for a few hours per year, it is often worth using very cheap to build, but very expensive to operate plant - for example some large grids also use load shedding coupled with diesel generators [24] at peak or extreme conditions - the very high kWh production cost being justified by not having to build other more expensive capacity and a reduction in the otherwise continuous and inefficient use of spinning reserve (see Operating reserve).
  • 16. In the case of wind energy, the additional costs in terms of increased back up and grid interconnection to allow for diversity of weather and load may be substantial. This is because wind stops blowing frequently even in large areas at once and for prolonged periods of time. Some wind advocates have argued that in the pan-European case back up costs are quite low, resulting in overall wind energy costs about the same as present day power.[25] However, such claims are generally considered too optimistic, except possibly for some marginal increases that, in particular circumstances, may take advantage of the existing infrastructure.[citation needed] The cost in the UK of connecting new offshore wind in transmission terms, has been consistently put by Grid/DECC/Ofgem at £15billion by 2020. This £15b cost does not include the cost of any new connections to Europe - interconnectors, or a supergrid, as advocated by some. The £15b cost is the cost of connecting offshore wind farms by cables typically less than 12 km in length, to the UK's nearest suitable onshore connection point. There are total forecast onshore transmission costs of connecting various new UK generators by 2020, as incurred from 2010, of £4.7 billion, by comparison. When a new plant is being added to a power system or grid, the effects are quite complex - for example, when wind energy is added to a grid, it has a marginal cost associated with production of about £20/MWh (most incurred as lumpy but running-related maintenance - gearbox and bearing failures, for instance, and the cost of associated downtime), and therefore will always offer cheaper power than fossil plant - this will tend to force the marginally most expensive plant off the system. A mid range fossil plant, if added, will only force off those plants that are marginally more expensive. Hence very complex modelling of whose systems is required to determine the likely costs in practice of a range of power generating plant options, or the effect of adding a given plant. With the development of markets, it is extremely difficult for would-be investors to estimate the likely impacts and cost benefit of an investment in a new plant, hence in free market electricity systems, there tends to be an incipient shortage of capacity, due to the difficulties of investors accurately estimating returns, and the need to second guess what competitors might do.[citation needed] The Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland commissioned a former Director of Operations of the British National Grid, Colin Gibson, to produce a report on generation levelised costs that for the first time would include some of the transmission costs as well as the generation costs. This was published in December 2011 and is available on the internet :.[26] The institution seeks to encourage debate of the issue, and has taken the
  • 17. unusual step among compilers of such studies of publishing a spreadsheet showing its data available on the internet :[27] OECD/NEA Estimates for USA[edit source | editbeta] Estimated Grid-Level Systems Cost, 2013 (USD/MWh)[28] Technology Nuclear Coal Gas Onshore Wind Offshore Wind Solar Penetration Level 10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30% 10% 30% Backup costs (adequacy) 0.00 0.00 0.04 0.04 0.00 0.00 5.61 6.14 2.10 6.85 0.00 10.45 Balancing costs 0.16 0.10 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2.00 5.00 2.00 5.00 2.00 5.00 Grid connection 1.56 1.56 1.03 1.03 0.51 0.51 6.50 6.50 15.24 15.24 10.05 10.05 Grid reinforcement & extension 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2.20 2.20 1.18 1.18 2.77 2.77 Total Grid-level System Costs 1.72 1.67 1.07 1.07 0.51 0.51 16.30 19.84 20.51 28.26 14.82 28.27 External costs of energy sources[edit source | editbeta] See also: Environmental impact of the energy industry and Economics of new nuclear power plants Typically pricing of electricity from various energy sources may not include all external costs - that is, the costs indirectly borne by society as a whole as a consequence of using that energy source. These may include enabling costs, environmental impacts or beyond- insurance accident effects. The US Energy Information Administration predicts that coal and gas are set to be continually used to deliver the majority of the world's electricity,[29] this is expected to result in
  • 18. the evacuation of millions of homes in low lying areas, and an annual cost of hundreds of billions of dollars worth of property damage.[30][31][32][33][34][35][36] Furthermore, with the ongoing process of whole nations being slowly plunged underwater, due to fossil fuel use,[37] massive international climate litigation lawsuits against fossil fuel users are currently beginning in the International Court of Justice.[38][39] An EU funded research study known as ExternE, or Externalities of Energy, undertaken over the period of 1995 to 2005 found that the cost of producing electricity from coal or oil would double over its present value, and the cost of electricity production from gas would increase by 30% if external costs such as damage to the environment and to human health, from the particulate matter,nitrogen oxides, chromium VI, river water alkalinity, mercury poisoning and arsenic emissions produced by these sources, were taken into account. It was estimated in the study that these external, downstream, fossil fuel costs amount up to 1%- 2% of the EU’s entire Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and this was before the external cost of global warming from these sources was even included.[40] [41] Nuclear power has largely worked under an insurance framework that limits or structures accident liabilities in accordance with the Paris convention on nuclear third-party liability, the Brussels supplementary convention, and the Vienna convention on civil liability for nuclear damage[42] and in the U.S. the Price-Anderson Act. It is often argued that this potential shortfall in liability represents an external cost not included in the cost of nuclear electricity. However these beyond-insurance costs for worst case scenarios are not unusual to nuclear power, as hydroelectric power plants are similarly not fully insured against a catastrophic event such as the Banqiao Dam disaster, where 11 million people lost their homes and from 30,000 to 200,000 people died, or large dam failures in general. As private insurers base dam insurance premiums on limited scenarios, major disaster insurance in this sector is likewise provided by the state.[43] Also of note is that more modern reactors than those of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant vintage, such as the proven Onagawa nuclear plant design,[44] demonstrated that it can survive 13 meter high tsunamis and safely shut down without incident, despite being the closest nuclear plant to the epicenter of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.[45] Photovoltaics[edit source | editbeta] Photovoltaic prices have fallen from $76.67/Watt in 1977 to an estimated $0.74/Watt in 2013, for crystalline silicon solar cells.[46] This is seen as evidence supporting Swanson's law, an
  • 19. observation similar to the famous Moore's Law that states that solar cell prices fall 20% for every doubling of industry capacity.[46] As of 2011, the price of PV modules per MW has fallen by 60% since the summer of 2008, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimates, putting solar power for the first time on a competitive footing with the retail price of electricity in a number of sunny countries; an alternative and consistent price decline figure of 75% from 2007 to 2012 has also been published,[47] though it is unclear whether these figures are specific to the United States or generally global. The levelised cost of electricity (LCOE) from PV is competitive with conventional electricity sources in an expanding list of geographic regions,[7] particularly when the time of generation is included, as electricity is worth more during the day than at night.[48] There has been fierce competition in the supply chain, and further improvements in the levelised cost of energy for solar lie ahead, posing a growing threat to the dominance of fossil fuel generation sources in the next few years.[49] As time progresses, renewable energy technologies generally get cheaper,[50][51] while fossil fuels generally get more expensive: The less solar power costs, the more favorably it compares to conventional power, and the more attractive it becomes to utilities and energy users around the globe. Utility-scale solar power can now be delivered in California at prices well below $100/MWh ($0.10/kWh) less than most other peak generators, even those running on low-cost natural gas. Lower solar module costs also stimulate demand from consumer markets where the cost of solar compares very favorably to retail electric rates.[52] As of 2011, the cost of PV has fallen well below that of nuclear power and is set to fall further. The average retail price of solar cells as monitored by the Solarbuzz group fell from $3.50/watt to $2.43/watt over the course of 2011.[53] For large-scale installations, prices below $1.00/watt were achieved. A module price of 0.60 Euro/watt (0.78 $/watt) was published for a large scale 5-year deal in April 2012.[54] In some locations, PV has reached grid parity, which is usually defined as PV production costs at or below retail electricity prices (though often still above the power station prices for coal or gas-fired generation without their distribution and other costs). Photovoltaic power is also generated during a time of day that is close to peak demand (precedes it) in electricity systems with high use of air conditioning. More generally, it is now evident that, given a carbon price of $50/ton, which would raise the price of coal-fired power by 5c/kWh, solar PV will be cost-competitive in most locations. The declining price of PV has been reflected in
  • 20. rapidly growing installations, totaling about 23 GW in 2011. Although some consolidation is likely in 2012, due to support cuts in the large markets of Germany and Italy, strong growth seems likely to continue for the rest of the decade. Already, by one estimate, total investment in renewables for 2011 exceeded investment in carbon-based electricity generation.[53] In the case of self consumption payback time is calculated based on how much electricity is not brought from the grid. Additionally, using PV solar power to charge DC batteries, as used in Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles and Electric Vehicles, leads to greater efficiencies. Traditionally, DC generated electricity from solar PV must be converted to AC for buildings, at an average 10% loss during the conversion. An additional efficiency loss occurs in the transition back to DC for battery driven devices and vehicles, and using various interest rates and energy price changes were calculated to find present values that range from $2,057.13 to $8,213.64 (analysis from 2009). [55] For example in Germany with electricity prices of 0.25 euro/KWh and Insolation of 900 KWh/KW one KWp will save 225 euro per year and with installation cost of 1700 euro/KWp means that the system will pay back in less than 7 years.[56] Additional cost factors[edit source | editbeta] Extraction, emissions, transmission, health[edit source | editbeta] This calculation does not include wider system costs associated with each type of plant, such as long distance transmission connections to grids, balancing and reserve costs, and does not include externalities such as health damage by coal plants, nor the effect of CO2 emissions on the whole biosphere (climate change, ocean acidification and eutrophication, ocean current shifts), nor decommissioning costs of nuclear plants(although in the USA, the cost of decommissioning is included in the price of electricity, as per the Nuclear Waste Policy Act), is therefore not full cost accounting: These types of items can be explicitly added as necessary depending on the purpose of the calculation. It has little relation to actual price of power, but assists policy makers and others to guide discussions and decision making. These are not minor factors but very significantly affect all responsible power decisions: Comparisons of life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions show coal, for instance, to be radically higher in terms of GHGs than any alternative. Accordingly, in the analysis below, carbon capturedcoal is generally treated as a separate source rather than being averaged in with other coal.
  • 21. Other environmental concerns with electricity generation include acid rain, ocean acidification and effect of coal extraction on watersheds. Various human health concerns with electricity generation, including asthma and smog, now dominate decisions in developed nations that incur health care costs publicly. A Harvard UniversityMedical School study estimates the US health costs of coal alone at between 300 and 500 billion US dollars annually.[57] While cost per kWh of transmission varies drastically with distance, the long complex projects required to clear or even upgrade transmission routes make even attractive new supplies often uncompetitive with conservation measures (see below), because the timing of payoff must take the transmission upgrade into account.