Fossil Fuels v Renewable Energy

From NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT

By Paul Homewood

Can renewable energy ever replace fossil fuels?

Fossil Fuels v Renewable Energy?

Let me start by stating that I am not pro or anti anything. In a free market, the best technologies, solutions and products automatically come to the fore, without the need for subsidies, regulations and mandates.

If renewable energy is all that is promised, it will do the same.

There is of course no doubt that the cheap, abundant and reliable energy provided by fossil fuels has transformed society and made all of us better off than ever before in so many ways.

We get rid of them at our peril!

So far, our transition to renewable energy in the UK has been painfully slow and extremely expensive. Wind and solar power still supply only 3% of the UK’s total energy consumption after two decades of trying. Meanwhile, according to the Office for Budget Responsibility, subsidies for renewables were expected to cost £12 billion in 2021/22. This actually understates the reality because it does not include all of the indirect costs involved in grid balancing and so on, meaning the true cost is probably over £15 billion.

It is of course true that the recent rocketing of gas prices has reset the agenda. But it is important to note that the current price does not reflect the cost of extracting gas. It is the result of an imbalance in supply and demand. Such imbalances have occurred before, and a normally functioning market would quickly increase gas production, driving prices back down to historic levels.

But even before those price rises, it was being claimed that wind and solar power were cheaper than fossil fuel. However such claims fail to take into account the additional system costs imposed by their intermittency.

Moreover, claims that offshore wind costs are now down to around £40/MWh simply are not supported by the evidence. The claims are derived from the prices agreed for Contracts for Difference, the government subsidy mechanism. However, wind farms are under no legal obligation to actually take up these contracts; they are effectively only options.

Detailed examination of actual company accounts continues to show that the capital costs for building offshore wind farms has not fallen significantly in recent years, and that the true running costs are probably around £100/MWh. To put this into perspective, historically wholesale electricity prices have been under £50/MWh.

Solar power has certainly come down in cost in recent years, but the technology is a dead end here in the UK, because of our latitude. In winter, when demand for electricity is at its highest, our solar farms typically work at only 2% of their capacity.

Solar power certainly has a future in sunnier climates. But even in India, for instance, the government have realised that they cannot run an electricity grid purely on intermittent power. Even their ambitious plans only project that a 11% of their energy will be coming from wind and solar by 2040.

And it is of course intermittency which is the overriding problem here. You can forget about batteries and other forms of storage, as these can typically only supply power for an hour or two. This is useless when the wind stops blowing for days and weeks on end.

Hydrogen is usually wheeled out as the answer to all of our problems, replacing gas needed to back up wind farms as well as heat our homes. However, even the Committee on Climate Change accept that most of the bulk of our hydrogen will have to be made by steam reforming natural gas.

This process is not only expensive, it also wastes a lot of the gas input. In other words, you need more gas to produce hydrogen than you would need if you just burnt the gas itself in the first place. Worse still, steam reforming emits carbon dioxide, so you need to bolt on a carbon capture system adding yet more cost.

All in all, hydrogen made this way would be double the cost of gas in energy terms. But, crucially, you would still need as much natural gas as you do now, and more. Far from replacing fossil fuels, hydrogen increases our reliance on them.

The alternative is green hydrogen, which is made by electrolysis. It is usually suggested that surplus wind power is used for this. However, the amounts of hydrogen which could be produced this way would be tiny, as well as extremely costly given the intermittency of the process.

The bottom line is that we will still need gas, and lots of it, to back up a renewable heavy grid. Indeed, the more renewable capacity we build, the more backup we need.

And that is only considering electricity. We need lots more gas for heating and industrial use.

The biggest problem with using hydrogen, or for that matter electricity, for domestic heating is how you cope with peak demand in winter. On average over the year, demand for gas is roughly double that for electricity. But in winter, peak gas demand is seven times as much.

To get a scale of the numbers, gas consumption peaks at around 350 GW in mid winter. Current government plans target wind capacity of 45 GW by 2035, which on average will produce just 15 GW, and often as little as 2 GW.

You can of course store gas very easily, so that it can be turned on and off when needed. Green hydrogen, most of which would be made during summer when demand for electricity is low, would have to be stored for use in winter, something for which there is no ready solution.

There are plenty of vested interests out there who are claim hydrogen is the way forward and call for government “investment”. But what they are really after are the fat subsidies that will come with it.

The simple reality is that we will continue to need fossil fuels for many years to come. In the long term we will have look to develop new technologies such as nuclear fusion, or build small nuclear reactors and the like if we want to decarbonise.

Renewable energy has a part to play, but it can never be the whole answer.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
4.6 41 votes
Article Rating
173 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
ferdberple
April 3, 2022 8:41 am

A better understanding of the problem starts with the understanding that fossil fuels are not an energy source. Thet are an energy storage mechanism.

Wind and solar are not energy storage mechanisms. Rather they are like the enginr in your car. Ther are energy transformation mechanisms.

You cannot replace gasoline for example with a car engine. Most people can see that. And for the exact same reason you cannot replace fossil fuels with wind and solar. They are distinctly different mechanisms.

It is this confusion that prevents a clear analysis of why you cannot replace fossil fuels with wind and solar. Fossil fuels are energy storage. Wind and solar are energy conversion.

You cannot directly replace storage with conversion. You need to factor in the cost of conversion of electricity back to storage, which to date has no efficient solution.

Thus, direct comparisons of fossil fuels to wind and solar are meaningless. Apples to oranges.

griff
April 3, 2022 8:41 am

Wind and solar power still supply only 3% of the UK’s total energy consumption…

Yes, but they supply 42% of its electricity and rising… and electricity has so far been the main focus of renewables.

Reply to  griff
April 3, 2022 2:22 pm

Not sure it’s possible for you to misunderstand more than you already do.

Charles
Reply to  griff
April 3, 2022 2:56 pm

So the UK is putting a large wet blanket on its economy, while worsening the scenery, the background noise, and the environment (hacking down trees) to provide 42% of 3% of the total energy required to get through a day ?

Reply to  griff
April 4, 2022 7:07 am

Yes, but [ Wind and solar power ] supply 42% of its electricity and rising

Spring has sprung, so “Solar” is starting to ramp up again, but it definitely hasn’t contributed “42%” of anything since last autumn.

Looking at “Wind” for the GB electricity grid, in February the 28-day average production rose from just under 10 GW to almost 15 GW.

As we enter the second quarter of 2022 we now have the “rising” numbers for March (see attached graph below) …

… Oh ! … Wait …

– – – – –

Notes

1) In July 2021 the “previous 28 days” maximum “Wind” production fell to ~10 GW for a couple of weeks.
In September 2021 there was a week when it fell to ~8 GW.

2) The “previous 28 days” minimum “Wind” production fell from it’s all-time high of 4.55 GW on the 27th and 28th of February to … [ drum-roll please ! ] … 382 Mega-Watts on the 28th of March.

3) The current (pun intended, that’s how bad a person I am …) “nominal / nameplate capacity” of the fleet of “Wind” turbines directly connected to the GB electricity grid is probably in the 24 to 25 GW range (the latest available DUKES / BEIS data says it went from 23,168 MW in Q1 2021 to 24,078 MW in Q3 2021, so it may well be above 25 GW by now).

4) Please tell everyone again just how much the contribution of “Wind + Solar” for GB electricity is rising (present-continuous tense) …

GB-Electricity_Wind-28-days_Feb2021-March2022.png
Reply to  Mark BLR
April 4, 2022 7:33 am

For reference, my “raw” data (daily cumulative generation, in GWh) for the period January 2021 to March 2022, from which the “average” line in the above graph was derived, is given below.

GB-Electricity_Wind-GWh_010121-310322.png
2hotel9
April 3, 2022 11:46 am

“Fossil fuels”, hydro and nuclear are the only renewable energy sources on this planet. Period. Full stop.

jono1066
April 3, 2022 2:47 pm

Back in 1971 Salters nodding ducks were showcased to England via the TV program called Tomorrows World, the wave energy system was showcased as a fantastic energy device that harvested energy from wave, all they needed to do was scale it up.
Fast forward 50 years (now that frightens me) and I still havent seen them around.
Maybe they just were not as financially viable as they thought.
Cornwall
s wave hub is going the same way.

Now just think what would have happened if someone provided ongoing financial payments to companies developing the Salters duck to the point that it made a profit for the company, they would still be with us today .

RevJay4
April 3, 2022 7:17 pm

Solar and wind. The big grift to enrich the few with the dollars of the many. Cut off the subsidies and let the free market decide which is the best provider of energy for all purposes. Enough of this nonsense. The only thing we should be discussing is how to prosecute the greenie scammers and assorted grant suckers who got us to this point.

Hutches Hunches
April 3, 2022 8:42 pm

If you were paying attention in the late 60’s and early 70’s, you might remember how organizations such as the Union of Concerned Scientists and Greenpeace staked out the position that Carbon was bad. Their logic which might have make sense at the time, was that Fossil fuels were polluting the environment and were due to run out on us in the near future anyway. So, we got the EPA, Clean Air Act, and a whole host of new State and Federal agencies. Well they did the job and cleaned up the environment, but as with all government agencies they took on a life of their own. Once they completed their mission to clean up the environment, they had to find a new purpose. Since Oil and Coal were still dirty and all, they became convenient a boogieman to justify their existence. WA LA ! Global Warming became the cause to celebrate and all the little rich kids with trust funds who make up the environmental movement had government agencies on their side. Now that this monstrosity has been unleased on us poor mortals, we are powerless to stop it. It will just have to run its course and collapse under its own weight. The danger, of course is ] that they will strip us of our freedoms and livelihoods to give as sacrifices to their Gia gods, before they roof caves in.