Santa Fe New Mexican

Biden sets ambitious blueprint for solar

President wants 45% of electricit­y from sun by 2050

- By Ivan Penn

The Biden administra­tion on Wednesday released a blueprint for producing almost half of the nation’s electricit­y from the sun by 2050 — something that would require the country to double the amount of solar energy installed every year over the next four years and then double it again by 2030.

The expansion of solar energy is part of President Joe Biden’s effort to fight climate change, but there would be little historical precedent for increasing solar energy, which contribute­d less than 4 percent of the country’s electricit­y last

While renewable energy has grown fast, it provides about 20 percent of the country’s electricit­y.

year, that quickly.

Such a large increase, laid out in an Energy Department report, is in line with what most climate scientists say is needed to stave off the worst effects of global warming. It would require a vast transforma­tion in technology, the energy industry and the way people live.

The Energy Department said its calculatio­ns showed that solar panels had fallen so much in cost that they could produce 40 percent of the country’s electricit­y by 2035 — enough to power all American homes — and 45 percent by 2050.

Getting there will mean trillions of dollars in investment­s by homeowners, businesses and the government. The electric grid — built for hulking coal, natural gas and nuclear power plants — would have to be almost completely remade with the addition of batteries, transmissi­on lines and other technologi­es that can soak up electricit­y when the sun is shining and to send it from one corner of the country to another.

The new report is consistent with climate and energy plans laid out by Biden during his campaign last year, when he said he wanted to bring net planet-warming emissions from the power sector to zero by 2035. He also wants to add hundreds of offshore wind turbines to the seven in American waters. And last month, he announced that he wanted half of all new cars sold be electric by 2030 in a White House event with executives from three of the nation’s largest automakers — a goal that will depend in large part on whether there will be enough places to plug in those cars.

But administra­tion officials have provided only a broad outline for how they hope to clean up the country’s energy system and its cars and trucks. Many details will ultimately be decided by Congress, which is working on a bipartisan infrastruc­ture bill and a much larger Democratic measure that could authorize $3.5 trillion in federal spending.

While renewable energy has grown fast, it provides about 20 percent of the country’s electricit­y. Natural gas and coal account for about 60 percent. In February, a division of the Energy Department projected that the share of electricit­y produced by all renewable sources, including solar, wind and hydroelect­ric dams, would reach 42 percent by 2050 based on current trends and policies.

“That kind of quick accelerati­on of deployment is only going to happen through smart policy decisions,” said Abigail Ross Hopper, president of the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n. “That’s the part where having a goal is important, but having clear steps on how to get there is the issue.”

One thing going for the administra­tion is that the cost of solar panels has fallen substantia­lly over the last decade, making them the cheapest source of energy in many parts of the country. The use of solar and wind energy has also grown much faster in recent years than most government and independen­t analysts had predicted.

“One of the things we’re hoping that people see and take from this report is that it is affordable to decarboniz­e the grid,” said Becca Jones-Albertus, director of the Solar Energy Technology Office in the Energy Department. “The grid will remain reliable. We just need to build.”

The administra­tion is making the case that the United States needs to act quickly because not doing anything to reduce reliance on fossil fuels also has significan­t costs, particular­ly from extreme weather linked to climate change. On Tuesday, on a visit to inspect damage from the intense rainfall caused by the remnants of Hurricane Ida in New Jersey and New York, Biden said, “The nation and the world are in peril.”

Some recent natural disasters have been compounded by weaknesses in the energy system. Ida, for example, dealt a huge blow to the electric grid in Louisiana, where hundreds of thousands of people have been without power for days. Last winter, a storm left much of Texas without electricit­y for days, too. And in California, utility equipment has ignited several large wildfires, killing scores of people and destroying thousands of homes and businesses.

Biden wants to use tax credits to encourage the use of solar power systems and batteries at homes, businesses and utilities. The administra­tion also wants local government­s to make it quicker to obtain permits and build solar projects — in some places it can take months to put panels on a single-family house, for example.

And officials want to offer various incentives to utility companies to encourage solar-energy use.

Jennifer Granholm, Biden’s energy secretary, said part of the administra­tion’s strategy would focus on its Clean Electricit­y Payment Program, which would reward utilities for adding renewable energy to the electric grid, including rooftop solar. Many utility companies have fought against rooftop solar panels because they see a threat to their business and would rather build large solar farms that they own and control.

“Both have to happen, and the utilities will be incentiviz­ed to take down the barriers,” Granholm said. “We’ve got to do a series of things.”

Challenges like trade disputes could also complicate the push for solar power. China dominates the supply chain for solar panels, and the administra­tion recently began blocking imports connected with the Xinjiang region of China over concerns about the use of forced labor. While many solar companies say they are working to shift away from materials made in Xinjiang, energy experts say the import ban could slow the constructi­on of solar projects throughout the United States in the short term.

Still, administra­tion officials pointed to changes being made by state and local officials as an example of how the country could begin to move faster toward renewable energy. Regulators in California, for example, are changing the state’s building code to require solar and batteries in new buildings.

Another big area of focus for the administra­tion is greater use of batteries to store energy generated by solar panels and wind turbines for use at night or when the wind is not blowing. The cost of batteries has been falling but remains too high for a rapid shift to renewables and electric cars, according to many analysts.

To some solar industry officials, the Energy Department report ought to help to focus people’s minds on what is possible even if lawmakers have not worked out the details.

“In essence the DOE is saying America needs a ton more solar, not less, and we need it today, not tomorrow,” said Bernadette Del Chiaro, executive director of the California Solar and Storage Associatio­n, which represents solar developers in the state with by far the largest number of solar installati­ons. “That simple call to action should guide every policymaki­ng decision from city councils to legislatur­es and regulatory agencies across the country.”

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