Los Angeles Times

Green energy is their mission

Germany’s bold goals, and its struggles, may provide lessons for equally ambitious California, experts say.

- By Rob Nikolewski

One place possesses the fourth-largest economy in the world. Another is home to the fifth-largest.

Both places have instituted ambitious energy and climate goals.

But one — Germany — is struggling to meet those targets and its citizens pay some of the highest electricit­y prices in the industrial­ized world. Is the German experience a cautionary tale for the other place — California?

It’s a question increasing­ly on the minds of some energy experts in the Golden State.

“There are a lot of parallels,” said James Bushnell, an economics professor at UC Davis. “Both have been leaders and both have experience­d a period of energy cost increases that are starting to create some worries of a pending backlash.”

Yes, California is not a country unto itself, but its gross state product in 2017 was $2.747 trillion. If the Golden State were a nation, it would have surpassed Britain in economic terms last year for the world’s No. 5 spot.

Germany, at $3.685 trillion, is No. 4.

Keen to drasticall­y reduce greenhouse gas emissions and transform its energy sector, German leaders

adopted a vast program called Energiewen­de eight years ago, and the country prides itself on setting the pace for change in the European Union.

In the United States, California sees itself in the same light — leading the nation in a raft of metrics, such as the number of rooftop solar installati­ons, and mandates, like the establishm­ent of the country’s most aggressive Renewable Portfolio Standard.

But Germany has suffered setbacks on its path to become cleaner and greener.

It set a long-term goal to generate 80% of its electricit­y from renewable sources by 2050. In the interim, Germany planned to slash CO2 emissions by 40% by 2020, compared with 1990 levels.

But this year, officials admitted the country would not hit the 2020 goal, saying it would reach 32% at best.

Greenhouse gas emissions in Germany have not decreased for the last nine years and emissions from the transporta­tion sector have not fallen since 1990.

“We in Germany have to admit that we have to get it right again,” Chancellor Angela Merkel said at a climate meeting in June.

It hasn’t come from lack of effort or money.

About $28 billion in subsidies go to the renewable sector in Germany. The country is expected to spend more than $580 billion by 2025 to overhaul its energy system, according to Bloomberg News.

As a result, renewable energy sources now account for 36% of the power in Germany.

In contrast to California, where the solar industry has boomed, wind power has taken off in Germany.

Accommodat­ing a longterm conversion to renewable energy has required a rapid expansion of Germany’s power grid.

Wind farms in Germany produce plenty of power but they are largely located in the northern part of the country while factories are concentrat­ed in the south. About 5,000 miles of transmissi­on lines are being laid, paid for by German utility customers.

In addition, wind energy production is so robust that windy conditions can sometimes deliver more energy than the grid can handle, overloadin­g power lines.

In August, Germany’s economics minister said grid expansion plans were “catastroph­ically behind schedule.”

But perhaps the biggest stumbling block relates to nuclear power.

After the 2011 disaster at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan after a tsunami, Merkel’s coalition government decided to shut down all nuclear power in Germany by 2022.

At the time of the decision, there were 17 nuclear plants operating in Germany. Seven remain. Although nuclear power has plenty of critics, it produces electricit­y free of greenhouse gases.

In an ironic twist, phasing out nuclear power triggered the constructi­on of new facilities using coal, one of the most polluting fossil fuels.

Renewable sources such as wind and solar have problems with “intermitte­ncy.” That is, solar production drops when the sun goes down and wind power wanes when breezes don’t blow.

To fill in the gaps, grid managers turn to “baseload” generation from other, more traditiona­l, sources, including coal, which accounted for more than a third of Germany’s energy supply last year.

“Prices for natural gas have increased in the last [few] years, making it less competitiv­e compared to coal,” Michael Pahle of Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research said in an email.

The growing pains have led to higher prices, largely shouldered by residentia­l power customers.

From 2015 to 2017, Germany inched ahead of Denmark for the highest electricit­y prices for household customers (35 cents per kilowatt-hour, in U.S. currency), according to the statistica­l office of the European Union .

“In Germany, commercial industrial rates have not gone up much,” said Severin Borenstein, a professor of business administra­tion and public policy at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley.

“It’s easy for companies to move across boundaries within the [European Union] so that if you raise commercial industrial rates very much, you would just get a bunch of leakage as companies moved to other parts of the EU,” he said. “So they’ve ratcheted up residentia­l rates.”

Despite paying higher energy bills, Germans still seem to support the country’s renewable energy strategy. A survey conducted in 2017 showed 88% of voters backed Energiewen­de.

Will California’s experience resemble Germany’s?

Not necessaril­y, Borenstein said.

“I think California has pursued a much smarter environmen­tal policy,” he said. “But in many ways, when you look at what Germany is doing, they aren’t pursuing the technologi­es in the same way” as California.

For one thing, coal is essentiall­y a nonfactor in California.

And the state is “grappling much more directly with how you balance the grid with intermitte­nt renewables” in the form of excess solar production, Borenstein said.

So much solar is produced at peak periods that wholesale energy prices can drop to zero or into negative territory.

That puts strain on the grid, and the California Independen­t System Operator (the organizati­on that oversees the operation of about 80% of the state’s electric power system) often has to send the excess solar to neighborin­g states like Arizona or curtail it.

The solution is to find a way to save the energy and dispatch it later, such as when the sun sets. One possible answer is battery storage.

The California Public Utilities Commission has ordered power companies to find storage options — such as a lithium-ion facility in Escondido recently built by San Diego Gas & Electric. But the sector is still in its early stages, and although storage costs are going down, they are still more expensive than traditiona­l energy sources such as natural gas.

According to the most recent numbers compiled by the California Energy Commission, natural gas accounts for the largest portion of in-state generation — 43.40%. Renewables are growing, up to 29.65%.

Nuclear power accounts for 8.69% of in-state generation — all from California’s last remaining nuclear plant, Diablo Canyon, which is scheduled to shut down in 2025.

Michael Shellenber­ger, president of the Berkeleyba­sed pro-nuclear research group Environmen­tal Progress, said California would struggle — just as Germany has — without nuclear power.

“If you shut down nuclear plants, your emissions are either not going to decline or they’re not going to decline nearly as quickly as they would if you kept nuclear plants open,” Shellenber­ger said.

Nuclear power may not emit greenhouse gases but the industry has a vast number of critics, especially in California.

Opponents cite the potential danger of radiologic­al exposure, the federal government’s failure to come up with a location to put the spent fuel stored at the 99 reactor sites across the country, and numerous cost overruns to construct new nuclear power plants.

Borenstein said making up for the loss of nuclear power would depend largely on how effectivel­y California can integrate renewables into the grid.

“We all know now that wind and solar power, on a per kilowatt-hour basis, can be produced pretty cheaply,” Borenstein said. “The problem is, if you can’t store it, it doesn’t end up [being used] at the right time.”

Other storage options include “pumped hydro” in which hydroelect­ric facilities, using turbines, pump water from one reservoir up to another and then release it. The ensuing rush of water generates electricit­y when the grid needs it.

“Some environmen­talists aren’t wild about” pumped hydro, Borenstein said. “It may not be an ideal solution but my view is there is no ideal solution. We have to be grappling with reality, not a perfect outcome, and deal with the reality that we’re not going to get there at all if the only solutions we propose are very expensive ones.”

California­ns pay an average of 15.23 cents per kilowatt-hour for electricit­y, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. Although that’s decidedly less expensive than the 35 cents per kilowatt-hour in Germany, California’s electricit­y price is about 50% higher than the average U.S. state’s.

“I am worried about where California’s rates are going,” said Bushnell of UC Davis, “but I don’t really see it following the German trajectory.”

The state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard requires utilities to obtain 50% of the state’s overall energy mix from renewable sources by 2030.

On top of that, Gov. Jerry Brown in September signed Senate Bill 100 into law, which calls on the state to derive 100% of its power from clean-energy sources by 2045.

SB 100 calls for 60% of the state’s total power to come from renewable sources such as utility-scale solar and wind by 2030.

The remaining 40% of the mix, to be achieved by 15 years after that, can come from other zero-carbon sources, such as large hydroelect­ric dams.

Bushnell worries that as the state gets closer to 100%, electricit­y costs will rise to a point where consumers will be driven away from electric power just as the state’s efforts to electrify the transporta­tion and heating sectors are taking off.

“We’re trying to squeeze every ounce of carbon out of the electric sector, no matter what the cost,” Bushnell said. “Somewhere between 60% and 100%, I think we’re going to hit a big cost spike and then we’ll have to think about how we buy renewables.”

Bushnell, who detailed his concerns in a recent blog post, wondered whether reaching a politicall­y popular 100% clean goal that could theoretica­lly triple the costs is as worthy as reaching, say, 80% or 90% and keeping costs manageable while ensuring electrific­ation efforts in other sectors.

“I think we’re crossing the threshold where the money spent on electricit­y is giving us decreased returns,” Bushnell said.

Dan Jacobson, state director of Environmen­t California and a staunch advocate of SB 100, acknowledg­es the issues facing Germany but does not see a direct connection that applies to California.

“The stuff we’re talking about isn’t easy, and that shouldn’t deter us from doing the work,” Jacobson said. “What it should encourage is a think tank-like process where we can all learn from each other’s mistakes and move forward.”

 ?? Patrick Pleul AFP/Getty Images ?? WIND POWER has taken off in Germany. About 5,000 miles of transmissi­on lines are being laid, paid for by German utility customers.
Patrick Pleul AFP/Getty Images WIND POWER has taken off in Germany. About 5,000 miles of transmissi­on lines are being laid, paid for by German utility customers.
 ?? Tribune News Service ?? THE SHUTTERED San Onofre nuclear plant south of San Clemente. California’s last remaining nuclear plant, Diablo Canyon, is scheduled to close in 2025.
Tribune News Service THE SHUTTERED San Onofre nuclear plant south of San Clemente. California’s last remaining nuclear plant, Diablo Canyon, is scheduled to close in 2025.

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