nypost.com Open in urlscan Pro
192.0.66.32  Public Scan

URL: https://nypost.com/2024/04/09/opinion/taxpayer-subsidies-havent-made-wind-and-solar-power-cheaper-or-better-for-ame...
Submission: On April 10 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Close the sidebar
 * US News
   * Metro
   * Politics
 * World News
 * Page Six
 * Sports
   * NFL
   * MLB
   * NBA
   * NHL
   * College Football
   * College Basketball
 * Post Sports+
 * Sports Betting
 * Business
   * Personal Finance
 * Opinion
 * Entertainment
   * TV
   * Movies
   * Music
   * Celebrities
   * Awards
   * Theater
 * Shopping
 * Lifestyle
   * Weird But True
   * Health
     * Fitness
     * Health Care
     * Medicine
     * Men’s Health
     * Women’s Health
     * Mental Health
     * Nutrition
   * Sex & Relationships
   * Viral Trends
   * Human Interest
   * Parenting
   * Fashion & Beauty
   * Food & Drink
   * Travel
 * Real Estate
 * Alexa
 * Media
 * Tech
 * Astrology
 * Video
 * Photos
 * Visual Stories
 * * Today’s Paper
   * Covers
   * Columnists
   * Horoscopes
   * Crosswords & Games
   * Sports Odds
   * Podcasts
   * Careers
 * * Email Newsletters
   * Official Store
   * Home Delivery
   * Tips

Close the sidebar
Menu
 * Facebook
 * Twitter
 * Flipboard
 * WhatsApp
 * Email
 * 

TRENDING NOW

Skip to main content

'KILLER SQUATTER' LEADS COPS TO SKELETON OF 19-YEAR-OLD FARMER...

TV OUTLET ACCIDENTALLY AIRS MAN'S TESTICLES DURING SOLAR ECLIPSE...

MISSOURI DEATH ROW INMATE EXECUTED 18 YEARS AFTER KILLING COUSIN,...

Opinion


TRILLIONS IN TAXPAYER SUBSIDIES HAVEN’T MADE WIND AND SOLAR POWER CHEAPER OR
BETTER FOR AMERICANS

By Bjorn Lomborg

Published April 9, 2024, 2:10 p.m. ET

Despite us constantly being told that solar and wind are now the cheapest forms
of electricity, governments around the world needed to spend $1.8 trillion on
the green transition last year.

“Wind and solar are already significantly cheaper than coal and oil” is how
President Biden conveniently justifies spending hundreds of billions of dollars
on green subsidies.

Advertisement

Indeed, arguing that wind and solar are the cheapest is a meme employed by green
lobbyists, activists and politicians around the world.

3
Joe Biden walks past solar panels while touring the Plymouth Area Renewable
Energy Initiative in Plymouth, New Hampshire, on June 4, 2019. REUTERS

Unfortunately, as the huge subsidies show, the claim is wildly deceptive.

Advertisement


EXPLORE MORE


HOW LONG BEFORE THE BRAVE NPR EDITOR EXPOSING THE WOKE BROADCASTER GETS SHOWN
THE DOOR?


JOE BIDEN'S INSANE ASYLUM POLICY MAKES LIFE EASIER FOR CRIMINALS MOMENT THEY
ILLEGALLY ENTER US


JOE BIDEN COURTS HATE AGAINST AMERICA WITH HIS AGENDA ON THE ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR

Wind and solar energy only produce power when the sun is shining or the wind is
blowing. The rest of the time, their electricity is infinitely expensive and a
backup system is needed.

This is why global electricity remains almost two-thirds reliant on fossil fuels
— and why we, on current trends, are an entire century away from eliminating
fossil fuels from electricity generation.

Advertisement

It is often reported that large, emerging industrial powers like China, India,
Indonesia and Bangladesh are getting more power from solar and wind. But these
countries get much more additional power from coal.

Last year, China got more additional power from coal than it did from solar and
wind. India got three times as much, while Bangladesh got 13 times more coal
electricity than it did from green energy sources, and Indonesia an astonishing
90 times more.

If solar and wind really were cheaper, why would these countries miss out?
Because reliability matters.

Advertisement

3
Workers inspecting solar panels on a rooftop of a power plant in Fuzhou,
southern China’s Fujian province. AFP via Getty Images

The typical way to measure the cost of solar simply ignores its unreliability.
The same is true for wind energy.

Biden’s Energy Information Administration puts solar at 3.6¢ per kilowatt hour,
just ahead of natural gas at 3.8¢. But if you reasonably include the cost of
reliability, the real costs explode — one peer-reviewed study shows an increase
of 11 to 42 times, making solar by far the most expensive source of electricity,
followed by wind.

Advertisement

The enormous additional cost comes from the need for storage. Electricity is
required even when the sun is not shining and the wind is not blowing, yet our
battery capacity is woefully inadequate.

Research shows that every winter, when solar contributes very little, Germany
has a “wind drought” of five days when wind turbines also deliver almost
nothing. That suggests batteries will be needed for a minimum of 120 hours —
although the actual need will be much longer since droughts sometimes last much
longer and recur before storage can be filled.

A new study looking at the United States shows that to achieve 100% solar or
wind electricity with sufficient backup, the US would need to be able to store
almost three months’ worth of annual electricity. It currently has seven minutes
of battery storage.

Advertisement

Just to pay for the batteries would cost the US five times its current GDP. And
it would have to repurchase the batteries when they expire after just 15 years.

3
Workers do checks on battery storage pods at Orsted’s Eleven Mile Solar Center
lithium-ion battery storage energy facility on Thursday, Feb. 29, 2024, in
Coolidge, Ariz. AP

Globally, the cost just to have sufficient batteries would run to 10 times the
global GDP, with a new bill every 15 years.

Advertisement

The second reason the claim is false is that it leaves out the cost of recycling
spent wind turbine blades and exhausted solar panels. Already today, one small
town in Texas is overflowing with thousands of enormous blades that cannot be
recycled.

In poor countries across Africa, solar panels and their batteries are already
being dumped, leaking toxic chemicals into the soil and water supplies. Because
of lifetimes lasting just a few decades, and pressure from the climate lobby for
an enormous ramp-up in use, this will only get much worse.

One study shows that this trash cost alone doubles the true cost of solar.

Advertisement

If solar and wind really were cheaper, they would replace fossil fuels without
the need for a grand push from politicians and the industry.

What do you think? Post a comment.

If we want to fix climate change, we instead must invest a lot more in low-CO₂
energy research and development. Only a significant boost in research and
development can bring about the technological breakthroughs that are needed — in
reducing trash, in improving battery storage and efficiency, but also in other
technologies like modular nuclear — that will make low-CO₂ energy sources truly
cheaper than fossil fuels.

Advertisement

Until then, claims that fossil fuels are already outcompeted are just wishful
thinking.

Bjorn Lomborg is president of the Copenhagen Consensus and visiting fellow at
Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. His latest books include “False Alarm”
and “Best Things First.”


Ad



SHARE THIS:


Filed under climate change ,  electricity ,  energy ,  solar power ,  4/9/24
Load more...

{{#isDisplay}}


{{/isDisplay}}{{#isAniviewVideo}} {{/isAniviewVideo}}{{#isSRVideo}}
{{/isSRVideo}}



TRENDING NOW

 1. 'Killer squatter' leads cops to skeleton of 19-year-old farmer who vanished
    after phone call with grandma in 2022
 2. TV outlet accidentally airs man's testicles during solar eclipse coverage
 3. Missouri death row inmate executed 18 years after killing cousin, her
    husband: 'Deeply, overwhelmingly sorry'
 4. Queen Elizabeth's 'favorite grandson', 46, splits from girlfriend
 5. Kate Middleton and family are about to face their most serious test yet:
    opinion
 6. McDonald's $25 'deal' goes viral, sparks debate over California's minimum
    wage increase: 'Your new normal'

https://nypost.com/2024/04/09/opinion/taxpayer-subsidies-havent-made-wind-and-solar-power-cheaper-or-better-for-americans/?utm_source=url_sitebuttons&utm_medium=site%20buttons&utm_campaign=site%20buttons
Copy the URL to share
 * Post Sports+
 * Email Newsletters
 * Mobile Apps
 * Contact Us
 * Tips

 * Facebook
 * Twitter
 * Instagram
 * LinkedIn
 * Email
 * YouTube

© 2024 NYP Holdings, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Terms of Use | Privacy

Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information/Opt-Out
Exit mobile version