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#solar#more#years#energy#money#panels#oil#electricity#system#china

Discussion (135 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

alexey-salminabout 7 hours ago
The title is misleading. $135 is not "money saved", it's "money not spent on fossil fuels" (even for that I couldn't find how it was calculated by solarpowereurope, but the number seems plausible).

To the discussion of whether $50B/y is a big figure or not. EU has around 400GW of PV installed. Cost to install per 1kW ranged between $600 and up to $4000 because a big chunk of that capacity was built when prices were much higher. If we consider average price at $1000 this means $400B on capex alone + yearly operational expenses. It can still be profitable (assuming current PV prices can be sustained + installed capacity doesn't grow faster than storage) but it's going to be many years until the investment is recouped and it starts to actually "save money for Europeans".

In any case, of course it's still nice to depend less on imported oil, even if not for money savings.

pshirshovabout 3 hours ago
Over last several years the cost to install 1kW was, ehm, less than €200 if you do it the retail way - 2..4 500W panels from the warehouse next street and a microinverter.

Thanks, China.

In addition to my primary system, I have a toy installation with 6 500W panels and a micro. I paid around 500 euros for that last August and by this time this toy installation generated me 1281 kWh. That's around €400 in terms of retail energy prices. So, I'll break even this August.

So, everything generated after would be exactly the "money saved".

nonethewiserabout 7 hours ago
Cleantechnica is a solar advocacy group and they consistently frame things in misleading ways like this.
random3about 5 hours ago
I was making a related point in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48462628 Got downvoted as I assume some didn't parse past the first line.
photonairabout 8 hours ago
With oil prices and wars, the adoption for renewables and not just solar should accelerate to wean the world off oil.
moffkalastabout 8 hours ago
I've half jokingly said it before, but I think by overall impact Trump and Putin's sheer chaos is doing an order of magnitude more to transition the EU to green energy than anything else that was done deliberately to fight climate change lmao.

People don't give a fuck until gasoline is 2€ per liter.

luke5441about 7 hours ago
Taxing/preventing extraction of crude oil upstream would always have been the better solution.
moffkalastabout 7 hours ago
Yeah but then it's your fault, you get voted out in 2 years, and the next government reverts it. Local governments are ever the populists for a reason.
vaylianabout 7 hours ago
Covid helped a lot with digitalisation and working from home.

But these things don't get momentum in a vacuum. People need to advocate for them beforehand, so that when the time is right, the decision makers will know who to turn to.

slawabout 7 hours ago
Some EU countries, at least Croatia, Hungary, Spain and Greece lowered gas prices to pre Iran war levels. I wish instead EU would lower tariffs on EVs. Xiaomi SU7 would get 45% total duty.
ndhbxydabout 8 hours ago
It will happen when we have better weather forecasting models. If it gets randomly cloudy for 5 days this month and 17 days next months screws up planning for factories, farms, datacenters etc.
gritzkoabout 7 hours ago
runtime_terrorabout 7 hours ago
Batteries, having a mixed grid of renewables, and new advances in nuclear solves this
lopisabout 7 hours ago
Batteries help, but they still cost way more than direct solar and wind. We still need way more solar and wind to use directly.
whimsicalismabout 7 hours ago
batteries are not yet competitive with fossil fuel
inglor_czabout 7 hours ago
To scale battery storage to a level that is capable of bridging, say, 48 hours of "Dunkelflaute" (darkness and no wind) on a regional scale (e.g. the entire Scandinavia) is probably unrealistic. Just the amount of lithium needed would be insane. And there were longer Dunkelflautes in recent history.

New advances in nuclear is what I hope for. First experimental SMRs are being installed in several places of the world, others are in design stage. Looks like a hopeful technology.

sfn42about 7 hours ago
Across a large enough area it's always sunny somewhere. And clouds don't interfere as much as you'd think. Add in wind, hydro, nuclear and some gas and you can handle pretty much anything just fine.
ndhbxydabout 7 hours ago
That has nothing to do with where factories, mines, farms etc are already located. You have to buy land to connect the power plant to the load and some guy in the middle wont sell. Handle congestion/maintenance of those lines etc. Lots of issues beyond just generation that the grid already is dealung with even though massive solar plants have been built. But main thing is weather forecasting has to get better because even with existing huge plants constant surprises happen.
whimsicalismabout 7 hours ago
you can handle it with solar & gas alone
ifjfkfkfkfjabout 7 hours ago
Yeah more dependency on china! Nothing to backfire, no Chinese influence at all!
have_faithabout 7 hours ago
China might produce the most panels at volume but this isn't a hardline monopoly like being able to cut off oil pipelines. We can produce panels ourselves if we _need_ to (as a coalition of friendly countries), it will of course be more expensive, but expensive is better than not possible.

Also, the more panels we already have, the less reliant we are. Energy doesn't stop flowing because deliveries of new panels stop during a conflict. You just pause expansion. A very different scenario to fuel reserves running dry in weeks.

triceratops25 minutes ago
> this isn't a hardline monopoly like being able to cut off oil pipelines

"Solar panels come from China" is a made-up problem. Oil pipelines and oil production equipment already have supply chains rooted in China and no one worries about that.

ben_wabout 7 hours ago
> Also, the more panels we already have, the less reliant we are. Energy doesn't stop flowing because deliveries of new panels stop during a conflict. You just pause expansion. A very different scenario to fuel reserves running dry in weeks.

If someone is genuinely worried about China cutting off their power, the fact my very cheap solar inverter came with an app should probably be a consideration here.

I'm not saying the Chinese did put a kill switch into it, but I am saying that we all know what Snowden reported about the US, and given that it really wouldn't be a surprise.

fmobusabout 6 hours ago
Unlike the oil dependency system, where there's actual scarcity of the thing you need (oil), there's nothing special about building solar panels that locks you to China. Basically any country could build it, but they need to figure out how to build stuff in general (as opposed to outsourcing like the last three decades)
triceratopsabout 6 hours ago
Solar panels are oil drills, not oil.
Tade0about 7 hours ago
Hard to call it influence when the panels, once installed, just work and slowly degrade over the course of years.

There are more immediate ways for China to influence Europe.

Meanwhile the recent oil debacle showed how fragile a system it is to have fossil fuels shipped across the planet.

meskabout 7 hours ago
Really ? One doesnt needs China to produce electricity once its installed.
triceratopsabout 6 hours ago
You don't buy anything else from China? You're sure none of the oil drills or gas turbines in your country are from there?
bor_realabout 7 hours ago
Is buying the means to produce energy from China worse than buying energy directly from Russia?
lysaceabout 7 hours ago
This is indeed the risk.
tapoxiabout 8 hours ago
I installed a solar system at my home in Massachusetts for 17k last year (after tax credits), 7.82 kw.

So far it's covered about 70% of my usage and 5.7 Mwh. I don't have a full year of data yet so I expect that number to grow as it includes the summer months. I drive an EV and this includes the car.

ctkhnabout 7 hours ago
Not sure what the actual cost was, but in 2015 my parents got a solar system in California that covers the entire house plus an EV. I remember looking at the time to payoff and I think it took maybe five years, now day to day power and all their driving is essentially free.
nonethewiserabout 7 hours ago
What about without subsidies?
unglaublichabout 6 hours ago
Cost will go up ~30%, so roughly 6.5 years instead of 5.0.
seidleroniabout 7 hours ago
Curious who you ended up using and if you recommend them.
tapoxiabout 6 hours ago
Great Sky Solar, they're a small local company and I had a great experience with them.
complianceowllabout 7 hours ago
Uh, that's absolutely badass...

As an adult, one of the things that fascinate me is self-sufficiency: the idea that you can buy a solar power system, install it, and use your own power -- without getting a bill in the mail every month, many times feeling like a victim of modern day suburban subjugation.

I'm still a good little obedient peasant, but I hope one day I can rely more on well water/rain catchment system, solar power, and propane.

Getting 70% of your electrical usage from your own solar power system has to be a good feeling.

elevationabout 7 hours ago
> one day I can rely more on well water/rain catchment system

There are some fascinating youtube videos on digging your own backyard shallow well (12-40'). This close to the surface, the water is considered non-potable, and you should have yours tested, but you can pump up what you need for backyard garden irrigation. Wells like this can be seasonal, as it is essential a rainwater catchment system using the permeable ground as your reservoir. Still, a neat concept for a relatively low cost.

polairscienceabout 7 hours ago
If you own a home you should genuinely spend time calculating and thinking about it. It's not near as far fetched as you think. You can benefit from the same technical advancements in engineering and manufacturing that have benefited every single industrial sector. It has never been easier. The number of plug and play components out there is unreal.

These days it's very much sun-legos. You decide what you can afford and what you think you need, and then you bolt the stuff together. Anyone who is willing to put time into it is capable.

complianceowllabout 7 hours ago
I 100% believe you! We're planning on doing a custom build for our next home, and I'm going to budget for solar. Like you said, it's gotten so much easier these days and I think that we don't take advantage of this because it requires budgeting/saving and because paying a monthly bill can be so much easier in the short-term. But I'm 100% going to do this.
ndhbxydabout 6 hours ago
They dont talk about rebound effect. When energy gets cheap/free people produce more, consume more, waste more.
parineumabout 6 hours ago
Cheap energy is what drives innovation.

You'd never have cheap solar if we didn't have cheap coal first.

The problems of today will be solved by more energy consumption (desalinization or carbon capture, for example), not less.

Innovation is "waste" until it creates something new.

ramesh31about 7 hours ago
>I installed a solar system at my home in Massachusetts for 17k last year (after tax credits), 7.82 kw.

This is the problem still in the US. Even at ~$0.23/kwh delivered in the northeast, you're looking at an ROI of nearly five years. Fine if you can float that kind of cash to feel better about yourself, but the economics just aren't there for most people, especially in cheaper parts of the country where rates are ~$0.12. Even financing you're looking at a monthly payment equal to or greater than an electric bill. Of course if you have the time to amortize it you'll come out ahead, but there's simply no cheap solution that can actually save real money out of pocket in any reasonable amount of time beyond theoretical future savings on paper. It will never be a true solution without massive subsidisation that reduces out of pocket to a 1-2 year horizon.

polairscienceabout 7 hours ago
This perspective is always so myopic to me. I say this as someone who doesn't make much money who's in the middle of a massive solar install (DIY). I made some simulations and a spreadsheet to work out all of the scenarios and I figured out that with a loan I can come out at monthly financing costs nearly exactly my electrical bill every month. That's right, I can have a 12 kWh battery backed 18 kW whole-home installation at no additional monthly cost.

The way that these discussions get contorted online will never make sense to me. The same people who make comments about ROI and it not making financial sense also have new car-loans on vehicles that depreciate catastrophically and are worth nearly nothing in 10 years. After 10 years my solar install will have been paid off for three years, I will get free electricity, and I will have the following benefits along the way:

Additional home value/equity

Backup power in case of grid problems or catastrophe.

Free fuel for my used battery electric vehicle. (compared to ~$200 a month in gas)

As close to zero carbon footprint as you can have in our contemporary world

And that's all assuming electricity prices stay the same. That's not even talking about how hydrocarbons are a very finite resource. Saying there's no "ROI" is looking at the situation like the only variable is your monthly expenses. It's the best decision anyone with a home who has the climate can possibly make. If you value your independence and personal security you'd be crazy to not do it. What would you pay, if you have the kind of money most people on these forums do, to ensure your home operates independent of external inputs? Imagine a new great depression? Or other such event?

ramesh31about 7 hours ago
>"Saying there's no "ROI" is looking at the situation like the only variable is your monthly expenses."

That's the reality of life for most people outside of our little bubble of six figure earners. If it's a higher monthly price, it's a nonstarter.

>"Additional home value/equity"

I wouldn't be so sure of that. Solar is a massive maintenance liability that a majority of buyers will avoid. Fine if you find the right one willing to pay a premium, but how much more are they going to pay for an old system vs. installing their own?

toast0about 7 hours ago
A 5 year ROI on a system that should last at least 20 years isn't an investment to feel better about yourself. It's a way to save money.

Three years ago, I was paying about $0.12/kWh, now it's about $0.22/kWh and installing a system makes sense.

It's cash up front for a savings later. My roof was due for replacement 'soon' but not immediately, and I didn't model the cost of moving that 3-5 years from the future to the present.

If you can't manage a 5 year planning horizon on a house, I'm not sure that home ownership is a great idea.

I get it if the ROI is 10+ years... too much uncertainty to put a lot of capital in.

Kirby64about 7 hours ago
Is a 5 year ROI really that crazy? Seems very reasonable considering lifespan of solar is more like 15-20 years (or more).
testing22321about 5 hours ago
Mine are guaranteed to output 80% of their rating after 25 years.

In the real world panels that old are putting out 85%

forcedtolinuxabout 7 hours ago
getting your money back in 5 years is pretty good, or am I missing something?

That's 15% yearly

ramesh31about 7 hours ago
That 5 years assumes you can provide 100% of your electricity usage via solar, which is a complete fantasy outside the south/southwest US, and would realistically require a >10kw system. But again, it's also the out of pocket money we're talking about. Very few normal people can float that, and opportunity cost is real.
yoranabout 8 hours ago
Just installed my plug-and-play panel this week in my small garden. 400W so not enough to power all my appliances. But I'm happy that I'm at least a little hedged against the negative geopolitical developments we're going through.
testing22321about 5 hours ago
Can I ask where you are in the world? I wish they were legal here.
brkabout 7 hours ago
This equates to about 20 cents per day per person, or about $73/year. It is a move in the right direction for sure, but I'm not sure I'd call this a significant statistic.
belornabout 7 hours ago
If I look at a electricity bills the last year, consumption costs sits around 20-25% of the total (with tax). The remaining 75% is grid connection fees and infrastructure fees that pay for expansion of future transmissions. The argument why those grid and infrastructure fees exist is primarily because of the intermittence problem cause by solar and wind.

This makes calculating the cost saving from solar and wind a bit complex.

SkitterKherpiabout 8 hours ago
Since the EU has been under investing in nuclear, solar + batteries investments is the only way forward. While the EU is making good progress, I still think it should invest a lot more a lot faster.

EDIT: I just found out that my comments show up as dead to everyone else. Can you please change that or let me know what to do? I am not a bot...

outside2344about 7 hours ago
My solar panels amaze me every day. It is just crazy that a flat panel, that doesn't have any moving parts, and requires a once a year cleaning (at most), just eliminated my power bill completely.
RetroTechieabout 5 hours ago
The amazing bit is the Sun it gets its energy from.

Doesn't make the solar panel(s) any less great to have though.

testing22321about 8 hours ago
My roof mount system is saving me $1000 a year in electricity, plus more in natural gas that I I disconnected, and it was $0 of my own money thanks to a grant and interest free loan.

Electricity is pre approved to increase a minimum of 5% a year (it just went up 16% this year for people out of town), so the savings will only increase.

I’ll pocket something like $35k in 25 years for $0. Best investment ever.

I’m in canada in a tight valley where it snows a boatload.

toasty228about 8 hours ago
> it was $0 of my own money thanks to a grant and interest free loan.

Pretty sure it's all tax funded.

Where I am as soon as the government introduced subsidies every single installer jacked their price 2-5x, now they all start right at the threshold at which the subsidies kicks in, amazing... it costs twice as much to the community but "0" to the individual

teifererabout 8 hours ago
> Pretty sure it's all tax funded.

That's too simple of a statement. Sure, govt grants are involved in subsidies for installation and the loan interest. But that thing is then generating electricity, which is what saves them the money.

So it's not "all" tax funded. Some of it is the sun's energy, and that was the whole point.

bgirardabout 8 hours ago
Similarly my friend swaps electric cars every couple of years (Volt -> Bolt -> Equinox) bragging about all the discounts and subsidies he's gotten. Maybe it's still beneficial through the used car market but it doesn't feel like an effective subsidy for the government to be handing out.
baqabout 8 hours ago
it's a way to get infrastructure built up. the tax dollars pay for bootstrapping of the ecosystem. it's actually smart in principle if you think about it, but obviously there's room for abuse and outright fraud.
1123581321about 7 hours ago
Where do you live? There should still be price competition on types of inverters, aesthetics, focus on highest ROI, etc.

I live in a heavily subsidized state and quotes ranged from (after subsidies/incentives) 5-6 year ROI to 20-25 year ROI.

testing22321about 7 hours ago
> Pretty sure it's all tax funded

Yes. I’m very happy my taxes are spent on things that improve the lives of everyday people rather than endless wars.

Either spend it on productive things, or have zero taxes.

baal80spamabout 8 hours ago
It ALWAYS happens.
cubefoxabout 7 hours ago
This seems highly doubtful. If solar saves money, why does Germany (with a lot of solar) have higher rather than lower energy prices?
Tade0about 7 hours ago
Partly because they still use coal, which is heavily taxed under the emissions trading scheme and partly because of the way electricity auctions work in most of Europe, namely every participant sells at the price offered by the highest bidder.

Spain opted out of this system and is now enjoying cheap wholesale electricity, which is fueling an industrial revival.

cubefoxabout 7 hours ago
> Partly because they still use coal, which is heavily taxed under the emissions trading scheme

... and solar is heavily subsidized, which could outweigh this effect. So this doesn't explain the high energy prices.

> partly because of the way electricity auctions work in most of Europe, namely every participant sells at the price offered by the highest bidder.

This doesn't explain why Germany has so high electricity prices.

ben_wabout 7 hours ago
> This doesn't explain why Germany has so high electricity prices.

It's the main thing which does.

Say you have two energy sources, Alice Electric can deliver at €0.03/kWh but only up to 10% of your demand, while Bob Energy can deliver 200% of your demand but all units will cost €0.5/kWh.

The net result of the electricity auction, as described, is that the consumers pay Alice and Bob €0.5/kWh each, which gives Alice a €0.47/kWh profit margin and therefore lot of money to expand operations if she wants to, but until she can actually supply 100% of demand, it's priced by what Bob charges.

Garlefabout 6 hours ago
Er... No?

Electricity prices in Germany are lower than last year.

https://www.zeit.de/wirtschaft/energiemonitor-strompreis-gas...

cubefoxabout 5 hours ago
I mean higher than in other countries with less solar energy, like France, which has mostly nuclear.
IAmBroomabout 5 hours ago
The "saves $" value is based on fossil fuels, not nuclear.
triceratopsabout 6 hours ago
Did you consider that Germany has solar because of high energy prices?
cubefoxabout 5 hours ago
Do you have any evidence that this is true?
triceratopsabout 4 hours ago
Logic. If energy is already cheap, building out any new power source is unnecessary.

Once you've determined you need new electricity generation, the cheapest source tends to get built. Right now that's solar; that's an objective fact.

Analemma_about 6 hours ago
The price of electricity is set by the marginal cost of the most expensive individual source - if your grid is 80% solar, 20% coal, the price you pay is the price of coal, because the solar providers can increase their prices to just below that of coal. Obviously I'm simplifying somewhat, but that's the general dynamic.

This is "by design" in the sense that it offers big subsidies to more solar generation to come online, but you won't see the biggest price cuts until the last expensive sources are pushed off the grid entirely. Because Germany's marginal source is coal, they pay way more than countries whose marginal source is gas or nuclear.

cubefoxabout 2 hours ago
Germany replaced a lot of its nuclear energy with solar. If this makes energy more expensive, solar is doing the opposite of saving money.
lnsruabout 8 hours ago
And yet all solar gear installed comes from China. Source: I am electrician installing it.
nemomarxabout 8 hours ago
Is anyone else manufacturing it at comparable prices yet?
superxpro12about 7 hours ago
It's hard to compete with slave wages
RetroTechieabout 5 hours ago
It's hard to compete with dark factories.

Going forward, a big factor in (lack of) "made in Europe" isn't high wages. It's that a) much manufacturing capacity was lost because it was offshored decades ago. It takes ages to restore that. And b) "how many jobs does it provide?" has traditionally weighed heavily in policy decisions.

Once robotization kicks in bigtime, it doesn't matter where labor is cheap. It matters where energy or raw materials are cheap. Or supply lines are short.

Like it or not, China is way ahead on that curve.

mark242about 7 hours ago
Where were the shoes that you are currently wearing manufactured?
runtime_terrorabout 7 hours ago
Curious; why is that an issue?
triceratopsabout 7 hours ago
So? Does every country that has oil also manufacture their own drills, rigs, and oil tankers?
slawabout 7 hours ago
Is it good or bad or it doesn't matter for climate?
kristopolousabout 7 hours ago
I'm sorry, that really just comes across as racism.
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random3about 8 hours ago
There's virtually an infinite number ways to assess something like this, and a single figure out of context is meaningless.

What's the deprecation schedule? Which financial "context" is it calculated within? A household may benefit from governmental support and profitable, while the aggregate financial situation may or may not be so. What timeline is it calculated on? A 5-10 year window may be unprofitable, while a larger one may be. An even longer one may change numbers completely...

reedf1about 8 hours ago
$135M a day is almost nothing (~$50b/yr) for an area with combined GDP of ~$30T.

Edit: People's general understanding of the scale of economies is genuinely terrifying to witness.

chiffre01about 8 hours ago
It's not nothing. Plus the fact that it's money not not getting shipped out of Europe to hostile regions is a net win.
adamrezichabout 8 hours ago
Where are the panels sourced from?
Sayrusabout 7 hours ago
Most panels are from China. Panels have a very long lifetime. Over their lifetime they generate way more than their price in oil. Europe is not a huge producer of oil and relies on imports to sustain its usage. Sourcing panels is effectively reducing the amount of money leaving Europe in the long term.
toomuchtodoabout 7 hours ago
China. With that said, they have so much solar PV capacity that they’re barely breaking even, even when exporting tens of GW of PV panels a month. I argue it’s a net positive the solar PV printers in China are kept in business to maintain their annual output, the world needs as much solar PV as it can produce as fast as possible.
cbg0about 8 hours ago
50 billion dollars a year is never "almost nothing".
pendenthistoryabout 7 hours ago
It's basically nothing for a entire continent, let's be real.
Tade0about 7 hours ago
It's enough to fund more than a 10% increase in installed solar capacity in the EU, so if all that energy were to be used to save money, double solar capacity every 7 years - or 10 years if assuming that 3% of all panels are retired annually.
jasoncartwrightabout 8 hours ago
Somewhere between 6-9% of total retail electricity spend. So, not almost nothing.
sidewndr46about 8 hours ago
If we're talking about money not spent, aren't savings almost unlimited just from mechanization? The train, the car, the shopping cart, the dishwasher may be saving us all several economies worth of work on a daily basis
wood_spiritabout 8 hours ago
Of course we can hope for more, but would you agree it is a good start though?
throw343about 7 hours ago
$50b/yr is not going to support the terrorism around the world
toomuchtodoabout 7 hours ago
This capital saved (~$50B/year) can be recycled into more renewables, storage, transmission, and EVs to further drive down future petroleum demand, creating even more savings into the future. Stocks vs flows. Price of clean tech keeps rapidly falling, investment will continue to ramp. Think like a flywheel.