The Borneo Post

We’ve been underestim­ating the solar industry’s momentum, that could be a big problem – Study

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ANALYSTS have been underestim­ating the expansion of solar energy for nearly two decades, scientists report in a new study released Friday. And that could be a serious problem for the industry and, maybe, the planet.

If policy makers believe solar is growing more slowly than it actually is, they may be less likely to prioritise the kinds of research and developmen­t that will help better integrate renewables onto the grid, such as improving battery storage technology. This could lead us to continue relying on more carboninte­nsive energy sources.

“I think the most important risk is that the regulatory environmen­t does not adapt in time to a rising share in solar energy,” said lead study author Felix Creutzig, a professor at the Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change, based in Germany.

The paper comes just a day after the release of a much-anticipate­d study on the electric grid, ordered by Energy Secretary Rick Perry back in April. At the time the study was launched, environmen­talists feared the report might be used to bash renewables and were quick to point out that multiple previous studies have concluded that wind and solar can continue to expand significan­tly without posing a threat to the grid’s reliabilit­y. ( The final report is somewhat more moderate than some renewable energy advocates had feared, although still favorable to coal and nuclear power.) The new paper, published Friday in the journal Nature Energy, points out that the deployment of solar energy has consistent­ly outperform­ed the prediction­s made by so- called “integrated assessment models,” which are commonly used to evaluate the ways different social, economic and technologi­cal factors might mitigate climate change, since at least the year 1998. For instance, the authors point out, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency has repeatedly predicted growth rates for solar deployment that are anywhere from 16 to 30 per cent lower than their actual rates end up being.

The researcher­s outline a number of reasons for the discrepanc­y. For one thing, models have often failed to account for the policies different countries have put in place to speed the expansion of renewable energy.

In the United States, an investment tax credit supports new solar installati­ons, while other nations around the world have enacted feed-in tariffs, which compensate consumers for any renewable energy they generate (for instance, through their own rooftop solar panels) and provide to the grid.

Additional­ly, the study notes, the costs of solar panels have been falling faster than expected. And the models may have also been overly optimistic in their assumption­s about the expansion of other low- carbon technologi­es, such as nuclear power or carbon capture and storage technology.

These low- carbon alternativ­es have actually been slower to develop, but model ling studies frequently assume they will be widely deployed in the future, creating less space for solar to fill. — WP-Bloomberg

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