1) Solar prices come down For the past few years, we have been quietly living through a stunning drop in prices thanks to an unintended loop of massive European subsidies and capacity overexpansion in China. As a result, from 2006 to 2013, photovoltaic panel prices dropped nearly 70%
The next step is for storage prices to fall too. Cheap storage is key so that people can have power at night, when the sun is down.
Right now, the cost of such
systems — about $0.22/kWh is only competitive with retail electricity in
Hawaii — the cost of vanilla electricity in California is $0.15/kWh.
Barclays says Tesla has single-handedly brought down the cost of
batteries over the past few years, from about $1,000/kWh in 2009 to
$300/kWh in early 2014. If the company's gigafactory successfully ramps up, costs could plummet.
2) The defection spiral commences
Once the prices for everything get cheap enough, homeowners begin to leave the grid.
There remains huge demand for
solar, and as costs continue to fall, the price point will continue to
match that sought by ever lighter hued green thumbs. This expanding
scale will in turn make it more expensive to stay on the grid, bringing
even more customers into the solar-storage orbit. "...Once solar +
battery approaches the retail cost of power, its advantage can scale
quickly," Barclays says.
3) Utilities flail around in their state capitols seeking relief
We've already seen this in
Arizona, where the state's electric utility has spent more than $3
million on a campaign to discourage solar adoption in the state.
California utilities also won new surcharges, and SolarCity recently
charged them with slow-walking grid connections. Neither will prove more
than speedbumps in the long-run, Barclays said. "W hile they may slow
the penetration of solar, any relief they offer utilities is likely to
be short lived. In Arizona, the fee increases the cost of a rooftop
solar installation about 5%. With the costs of solar installations
falling about 10% per year, we expect the pace of installations to
recover before the end of 2014. While we need more months of data to
confirm our view, this may prove to be an example of how quickly the
technological/cost curve can overtake regulatory responses."
4) The decommissioning process begins
As demand for baseload
generation becomes less consistent, utilities could be forced to replace
aging power units earlier than scheduled with more modern and efficient
"peakers." This could end up lowering utility margins, as well as bring
forward cost loads.
This is the key moment: Utility
companies being forced to upgrade their plants in the face of a
declining customer base. That's a killer combination.
5) The market turns
In Germany, aggressive subsidies
and a move away from nuclear led to an explosion of renewables
expansion. Since the beginning of 2010 (though for reasons that go
beyond simply that outgrowth), Germany’s two largest utilities had stock
price declines of 55-60%, compared with a near 60% gain in the DAX.
No comments:
Post a Comment