According to Greentech Media, SunShot has shattered its 2020 goal of reaching $1.00 per watt for utility-scale solar utility costs 3 years earlier.
Founded back in 2011 when Stephen Chu was the US Department of Energy Secretary, the SunShot goal was to get utility-scale costs down to $1.00/watt.
Initial projections had the cost at $4.00 a watt in early 2011, GTM said.
Chu envisioned the SunShot initiative
would cut 75% of the total costs of PV solar energy without subsidies
before 2020, to reach cost competitiveness with other energy forms. Chu
pointed to 4 key areas where SunShot would focus to bring solar costs
down:
- Solar cell & array technology
- Power electronics to maximize installation performance
- Enhancements in solar manufacturing operations
- Design, permitting & installations for solar energy systems.
Other areas besides solar systems have
benefitted the overall industry, including falling labor, inverter, and
tracking costs, according to GTM, but as noted above, the target has already been achieved.
However, despite SunShot reaching its mission, various soft costs — including customer acquisition costs — increased.
The debate goes on regarding what
impact the Department of Energy’s SunShot Initiative made on pushing
prices down. Ben Gallagher, a GTM Research solar analyst said
SunShot provided monetary and market signals to entrepreneurs and
investors to “make the market” more efficient for them. He said SunShot
boosted the solar industry by giving consumers and merchants the faith
to endure more risk.
However, Gallagher pointed out that
“pure market forces,” including an imbalance in global supply &
demand and Chinese scaling also has played a part in the overall
dramatic drops in solar system costs.
The US Department of Energy loans program also contributed to declining solar costs. This is because First Solar and SunPower used this program to create large-scale solar plants with cheap capital, which meant lower costs then and going forward.
The loans program provided $32 billion
with a fail rate of 2.33%, which, according to former SunShot head Peter
Davids, was better than most bank failure rates. This loan program has
also created $1.65 billion in interest payments, according to Bloomberg.
SunShot and the US loans program made a
great contribution in scaling solar power projects, cutting costs, and
stimulating a brighter future (no matter what Trump tells you). Although, it is hard to tease out how much of the USA’s nearly 36 GW
of solar capacity is because of these programs versus other domestic
and global economic factors and initiatives. Nonetheless, these two
programs provided much-needed support in getting an emerging industry
off the ground in the 21st century. It is astonishing that total US solar capacity back in 2008 was 9.18 GW.
Given the ongoing falling costs (expected for decades without breakthroughs),
solar will become more cost competitive with fossil fuels as utilities,
businesses, and people see its economic benefits. Well, it’s already typically cheaper than fossil fuels, but it will become much, much cheaper.
Gallagher said even renewable energy skeptics couldn’t deny solar’s
compelling and improving cost competitiveness in today’s market.
This is important in an age where the Trump administration has denied climate change and is threatening to cut renewable energy investments, despite 2016 being the hottest year on the planet (after 2015 and 2014 were), and despite solar and wind energy creating 12x more jobs than the US economy as a whole in recent years.
source: https://cleantechnica.com
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