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Cost of electricity by source

Different methods of electricity generation can incur a variety of different costs, which can be divided into three general categories: 1) wholesale costs, or all costs paid by utilities associated with acquiring and distributing electricity to consumers, 2) retail costs paid by consumers, and 3) external costs, or externalities, imposed on society.

Wholesale costs include initial capital, operations & maintenance (O&M), transmission, and costs of decommissioning. Depending on the local regulatory environment, some or all wholesale costs may be passed through to consumers. These are costs per unit of energy, typically represented as dollars/megawatt hour (wholesale). The calculations also assist governments in making decisions regarding energy policy.

On average the levelized cost of electricity from utility scale solar power and onshore wind power is less than from coal and gas-fired power stations,[1]: TS-25  but this varies a lot depending on location.[2]: 6–65 

Cost metrics edit

Costs
 
Levelized cost: With increasingly widespread implementation of renewable energy sources, costs have declined, most notably for energy generated by solar panels.[3][4]
Levelized cost of energy (LCOE) is a measure of the average net present cost of electricity generation for a generating plant over its lifetime.
 
Past costs of producing renewable energy declined significantly,[5] with 62% of total renewable power generation added in 2020 having lower costs than the cheapest new fossil fuel option.[6]
 
"Learning curves": Trend of costs and deployment over time, with steeper lines showing greater cost reductions as deployment progresses.[7] With increased deployment, renewables benefit from learning curves and economies of scale.[8]

Levelized cost of electricity edit

The levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) is a metric that attempts to compare the costs of different methods of electricity generation consistently. Though LCOE is often presented as the minimum constant price at which electricity must be sold to break even over the lifetime of the project, such a cost analysis requires assumptions about the value of various non-financial costs (environmental impacts, local availability, others), and is therefore controversial. Roughly calculated, LCOE is the net present value of all costs over the lifetime of the asset divided by an appropriately discounted total of the energy output from the asset over that lifetime.[9]

Levelized cost of storage edit

The levelized cost of storage (LCOS) is analogous to LCOE, but applied to energy storage technologies such as batteries.[10] Regardless of technology, however, storage is but a secondary source of electricity dependent on a primary source of generation. Thus, a true cost accounting demands that the costs of both primary and secondary sources be included when the cost of storage is compared to the cost of generating electricity in real time to meet demand.[citation needed]

A cost factor unique to storage are losses that occur due to inherent inefficiencies of storing electricity, as well as increased CO2 emissions if any component of the primary source is less than 100% carbon-free.[11] In the U.S., a comprehensive 2015 study found that net system CO2 emissions resulting from storage operation are nontrivial when compared to the emissions from electricity generation [in real time to meet demand], ranging from 104 to 407 kg/MWh of delivered energy depending on location, storage operation mode, and assumptions regarding carbon intensity.[11]

Levelized avoided cost of electricity edit

The metric levelized avoided cost of energy (LACE) addresses some of the shortcomings of LCOE by considering the economic value that the source provides to the grid. The economic value takes into account the dispatchability of a resource, as well as the existing energy mix in a region.[12]

In 2014, the US Energy Information Administration recommended[13] that levelized costs of non-dispatchable sources such as wind or solar be compared to the "levelized avoided cost of energy" (LACE) rather than to the LCOE of dispatchable sources such as fossil fuels or geothermal. LACE is the avoided costs from other sources divided by the annual yearly output of the non-dispatchable source.[example needed] The EIA hypothesized that fluctuating power sources might not avoid capital and maintenance costs of backup dispatchable sources. The ratio of LACE to LCOE is referred to as the value-cost ratio. When LACE (value) is greater than LCOE (cost), then value-cost ratio is greater than 1, and the project is considered economically feasible.[14]

Value-adjusted levelized cost of electricity edit

The value-adjusted levelized cost of electricity (VALCOE) is a metric devised by the International Energy Agency which includes both the cost of the electricity and the value to the electricity system.[15] For example, the same amount of electricity is more valuable at a time of peak demand. However VALCOE does not take into account future changes to the electricity system, for example the addition of much more solar power could reduce midday value but today's VALCOE does not take that into account.[16][unreliable source?]

Capture rate edit

The capture rate is the average market price (or capture price) that a source receives divided by the average price for electricity over a period.[17][18][19][20] For example, a dammed hydro plant might only generate when prices are high and so have a capture rate of 200%; whereas a source that is not dispatchable, such as a wind farm without batteries, would typically have a capture rate under 100%.[20] Typically the more of a single type of renewable that is built in a pricing area (such as Great Britain) the lower the capture rate will become for that type, for example if many wind farms generate a lot at the same time the price at that time will go down.[17] There can be curtailment if grid connectivity is lacking across the pricing area – for example from wind power in Scotland to consumers in England – resulting in the capture rate not reflecting the true cost.[17]

Cost factors edit

While calculating costs, several internal cost factors have to be considered.[21] Note the use of "costs," which is not the actual selling price, since this can be affected by a variety of factors such as subsidies and taxes:

  • Capital costs tend to be low for gas and oil power stations; moderate for onshore wind turbines and solar PV (photovoltaics); higher for coal plants and higher still for waste-to-energy, wave and tidal, solar thermal, offshore wind and nuclear.
  • Fuel costs – high for fossil fuel and biomass sources, low for nuclear, and zero for many renewables. Fuel costs can vary somewhat unpredictably over the life of the generating equipment, due to political and other factors.

To evaluate the total cost of production of electricity, the streams of costs are converted to a net present value using the time value of money. These costs are all brought together using discounted cash flow.[22][23]

Capital costs edit

For power generation capacity capital costs are often expressed as overnight cost per kilowatt. Estimated costs are:

Cost per kW
Type US EIA[24] US NREL[25] $/MWh[25] CF[25]
Coal power $4,074 $3,075–5,542
Coal with 90% carbon capture $6,495–6,625
Natural gas $922–2,630
Combined-cycle $1,062–1,201
Combined-cycle with 90% carbon capture $2,736–2,845
Internal combustion engine $2,018
Turbine, aeroderivative $1,294
Turbine, industrial $785
Nuclear $6,695–7,547 $7,442–7,989 $81–82 94%
Wind power $1,718 $1,462 $27–75 18–48%
Wind, offshore $4,833–6,041 $3,285–5,908 $67–146 29–52%
Distributed generation (wind) $1,731–2,079 $2,275–5,803 $32–219 11–52%
Solar thermal/concentrated $7,895 $6,505 $76–97 49–63%
Solar photovoltaic $1,327 $1,333–2,743 $31–146 12–30%
Solar PV with storage $1,748 $2,044 $53–81 20–31%
Battery storage $1,316 $988–4,774 8–42%
Fuel cells $6,639–7,224
Pumped-storage hydroelectricity $1,999–5,505
Hydropower, conventional $3,083 $2,574–16,283 $60–366 31–66%
Biomass $4,524 $4,416 $144 64%
Geothermal power $3,076 $6,753–46,223 $55–396 80–90%

Real life costs can diverge significantly from those estimates. Olkiluoto block 3, which achieved first criticality in late 2021 had an overnight cost to the construction consortium (the utility paid a fixed price agreed to when the deal was signed of only 3.2 billion euros) of €8.5 billion and a net electricity capacity of 1.6 GW or €5310 per kW of capacity.[26] Meanwhile Darlington Nuclear Generating Station in Canada had an overnight cost of CA$5.117 billion for a net electric capacity of 3512 MW or CA$1,457 per kW of capacity.[27] The oft cited figure of CA$14.319 billion – which works out to CA$4,077 per kW of capacity – includes interest (a particularly high cost in this case as the utility had to borrow at market rates and had to absorb the cost of delays in construction) and is thus not an "overnight cost". Furthermore, there is the issue of comparability of different sources of power, as capacity factors can be as low as 10–20% for some wind and solar applications reaching into the 50% range for offshore wind and finally above 90% for the most reliable nuclear power plants.[28] The average capacity factor of all commercial nuclear power plants in the world in 2020 was 80.3% (83.1% the prior year) but this includes outdated Generation II nuclear power plants and countries like France which run their nuclear power plants load following which reduces the capacity factor.[29] Peaking power plants have particularly low capacity factors but make up for it by selling electricity at the highest possible price when supply does not meet demand otherwise.[30]

The first German Offshore Wind Park Alpha Ventus Offshore Wind Farm with a nameplate capacity of 60 MW cost €250 million (after an initial estimate of €190 million).[31] In 2012, it produced 268 GWh of electricity, achieving a capacity factor of just over 50%.[32] If the overnight cost is calculated for the nameplate capacity, it works out to €4167 per kW whereas if one takes into account the capacity factor, the figure needs to be roughly doubled.

Geothermal power is unique among renewables in that it usually has a low above-ground impact and is capable of baseload power generation as well as combined heat and power. However, depending on the plant and conditions underground naturally occurring radioactive materials such as radon may be released into the air.[33] This partially offsets relatively high costs per capacity which were cited as US$200 million for the 45 MW first phase of Þeistareykir Geothermal Power Station and a total of US$330 million for the 90 MW combined two first phases. This gives a cost per kW of capacity of US$4,444 if only the first phase is considered and US$3,667 if the cost estimates for both phases together hold.[34] The source also calls this power plant uniquely cost effective for geothermal power and the unique geology of Iceland makes the country one of the largest producers of geothermal power worldwide and by far the largest per capita or relative to all energy consumed.

Block 5 of Irsching Power Station in Southern Germany uses natural gas as fuel in a combined cycle converting 1750 megawatts of thermal energy to 847 net MW of usable electricity. It cost €450 million to build.[35] This works out to some €531 per kW of capacity. However, due to the uneconomical prospect of operating it as a peaking power plant, the owners, soon after opening the plant in 2010, wanted to shut down the plant.[36]

The LCOE of floating wind power increases with the distance from shore.[37]

The Lieberose Photovoltaic Park – one of the largest in Germany – had a nameplate capacity at opening of 52.79 megawatt and cost some €160 million to build[38][39] or €3031 per kW. With a yearly output of some 52 GWh (equivalent to just over 5.9 MW) it has a capacity factor just over 11%. The €160 million figure was again cited when the solar park was sold in 2010.[40]

The world's largest solar farm to date (2022) in Rajasthan, India – Bhadla Solar Park – has a total nameplate capacity of 2255 MW and cost a total of 98.5 billion Indian rupees to build.[41] This works out to roughly 43681 rupees per kW.

As can be seen by these numbers, costs vary wildly even for the same source of electricity from place to place or time to time and depending on whether interest is included in total cost. Furthermore, capacity factors and the intermittency of certain power sources further complicate calculations. Another issue that is often omitted in discussions is the lifespan of various power plants – some of the oldest hydropower plants have existed for over a century, and nuclear power plants going on five or six decades of continuous operation are no rarity. However, many wind turbines of the first generation have already been torn down as they can no longer compete with more modern wind turbines and/or no longer fit into the current regulatory environment.[citation needed] Some of them were not even twenty-five years old. Solar panels exhibit a certain aging, which limits their useful lifetime, but real world data does not yet exist for the expected lifetime of the latest models.

Operations and maintenance (O&M) costs edit

O&M costs include marginal costs of fuel, maintenance, operation, waste storage, and decommissioning for an electricity generation facility. Fuel costs tend to be highest for oil fired generation, followed in order by coal, gas, biomass and uranium. Due to the high energy density of uranium (or MOX fuel in plants that use this alternative to uranium) and the comparatively low price on the world uranium market (especially when measured in units of currency per unit of energy content), fuel costs only make up a fraction of the operating costs of nuclear power plants. In general, the cost balance between capital and running costs tilts in favor of lower operating expenses for renewables and nuclear and in the other direction for fossil fuels.

As sovereign debt in high income countries is usually to be had at lower interest rates than private loans, nuclear and renewable power become significantly cheaper – also compared to fossil alternatives – the bigger the involvement of state investment or state guarantees. In the Global South, where interest rates tend to be higher, the shorter construction period of small scale projects (particularly wind and solar) partially compensates for their increased capital cost. In terms of import substitution, solar can be particularly attractive in replacing bunker oil or diesel generators for rural electrification as it needs no imported hydrocarbons and as it allows hydrocarbon resources (where available) to be exported instead.[42][43]

Short-term fluctuations in fuel prices can have significant effects on the cost of energy generation in natural gas and oil fired power plants and to a lesser extent for coal fired power plants. As renewable energies need no fuel, their costs are independent of world markets for fuels once built. Coal-fired power plants are often supplied with locally or at least domestically available coal – this is especially true for lignite whose low grade and high moisture content make transporting it over long distances uneconomical – and are thus less subject to the influence of world markets. If there is a carbon tax or other forms of CO2-pricing, this can have a significant impact on the economic viability of fossil fueled power plants. Due to the ease of stockpiling uranium and the rarity of refueling (most Pressurized Water Reactors will change about a quarter to a third of their fuel loading every one and a half to two years[44][45]), short term fluctuations in world uranium prices are a risk absorbed by fuel suppliers, not power plant operators. However, long-term trends in uranium price can have an effect of a few tenths of a cent to a cent or two per kilowatt-hour on the final price of nuclear energy.[46]

The biggest factor in the operating costs of both nuclear and renewable are local wages – in most cases those need to be paid regardless of whether the plant is operating at full capacity or putting out only a fraction of its nameplate capacity and thus those plants are usually run to as high a fraction of their capacity as the market (negative prices) and weather (avoiding overheating rivers with cooling water, availability of sun or wind...) allow.[47][48] However, in France the nuclear power plants which provide some 70% of electricity demand are run load following to stabilize the grid. As a lot of home heating in France is supplied via electric means (heat pumps and resistive heating), there is a notable seasonality to nuclear energy generation in France with planned outages usually scheduled for the lower demand summer period, which also coincides with school holidays in France. In Germany some two decades old and older wind turbines were shut down after no longer receiving renewable energy subsidies due to a reported market-rate electricity price of some €0.03 per kWh not covering marginal costs or only covering them as long as no major maintenance was needed.[49] By contrast after being fully depreciated, Germany's (then remaining) nuclear power plants were described in media reports throughout the 2010s and into the early 2020s as highly profitable for their operators even without direct government subsidy.[50][51][52]

Market matching costs edit

Many scholars, such as Paul Joskow, have described limits to the "levelized cost of electricity" metric for comparing new generating sources. In particular, LCOE ignores time effects associated with matching production to demand. This happens at two levels:

  • Dispatchability, the ability of a generating system to come online, go offline, or ramp up or down, quickly as demand swings.
  • The extent to which the availability profile matches or conflicts with the market demand profile.

Ramp rates (how fast the power can be increased or decreased) may be quicker for more modern nuclear and the economics of nuclear power plants differ.[53][54] Nevertheless, capital intensive technologies such as wind, solar, and nuclear are economically disadvantaged unless generating at maximum availability since the LCOE is nearly all sunk-cost capital investment. Grids with very large amounts of intermittent power sources, such as wind and solar, may incur extra costs associated with needing to have storage or backup generation available.[55] At the same time, intermittent sources can be even more competitive if they are available to produce when demand and prices are highest, such as solar during summertime mid-day peaks seen in hot countries where air conditioning is a major consumer.[56]

Another limitation of the LCOE metric is the influence of energy efficiency and conservation (EEC).[57][better source needed] In the 2010s EEC caused the electricity demand of many countries, such as the US,[58] to remain flat or decline.[59][60] For solar systems installed at the point of end use, it may be more economical to invest in EEC first, then solar, or both at the same time.[61] This results in a smaller required solar system than what would be needed without the EEC measures. However, designing a solar system on the basis of LCOE would cause the smaller system LCOE to increase, as the energy generation drops faster than the system cost.[clarification needed] The whole of system life cycle cost should be considered, not just the LCOE of the energy source.[57] LCOE is not as relevant to end-users than other financial considerations such as income, cashflow, mortgage, leases, rent, and electricity bills.[57] Comparing solar investments in relation to these can make it easier for end-users to make a decision, or using cost-benefit calculations "and/or an asset's capacity value or contribution to peak on a system or circuit level".[57]

External costs of energy sources edit

Typically pricing of electricity from various energy sources may not include all external costs – that is, the costs indirectly borne by society as a whole as a consequence of using that energy source.[62] These may include enabling costs, environmental impacts, energy storage, recycling costs, or beyond-insurance accident effects.

Solar panel performance is usually guaranteed for 25 years and sometimes 30.[63] According to a 2021 Harvard Business Review study costs of recycling solar panels will reach $20–30 per panel in 2035, which would increase the LCOE fourfold for PV solar power but only if panels are replaced after 15 years rather than the expected 30 years. If panels are replaced early this presents a significant policy challenge because if the recycling is made legal duty of the manufacturers (as it already is in the EU) it will dramatically reduce profit margins on this already competitive market.[64] A 2021 IEA study of repairing old panels to reuse rather than recycle them concluded that the financial viability depends on country specific factors such as grid tariffs, but that reuse is only likely for utility solar, as rooftop owners will want to make best use of space with more efficient new panels.[65]

An EU funded research study known as ExternE, or Externalities of Energy, undertaken over the period of 1995 to 2005 found that the cost of producing electricity from coal or oil would double over its present value, and the cost of electricity production from gas would increase by 30% if external costs such as damage to the environment and to human health, from the particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, chromium VI, river water alkalinity, mercury poisoning and arsenic emissions produced by these sources, were taken into account. It was estimated in the study that these external, downstream, fossil fuel costs amount up to 1–2% of the EU's entire Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and this was before the external cost of global warming from these sources was even included.[66][67] Coal has the highest external cost in the EU, and global warming is the largest part of that cost.[62] Sustainable energy avoids or greatly reduces future costs to society, such as respiratory illnesses.[68][69] In 2022 the EU created a green taxonomy to indicate which energy investments reduce such external costs.

A means to address a part of the external costs of fossil fuel generation is carbon pricing — the method most favored by economists for reducing global-warming emissions.[70] Carbon pricing charges those who emit carbon dioxide for their emissions. That charge, called a "carbon price", is the amount that must be paid for the right to emit one tonne of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Carbon pricing usually takes the form of a carbon tax or a requirement to purchase permits to emit (also called "allowances").

Depending on the assumptions of possible accidents and their probabilities external costs for nuclear power vary significantly and can reach between 0.2 and 200 ct/kWh.[71] Furthermore, nuclear power is working under an insurance framework that limits or structures accident liabilities in accordance with the Paris convention on nuclear third-party liability, the Brussels supplementary convention, and the Vienna convention on civil liability for nuclear damage[72] and in the U.S. the Price-Anderson Act. It is often argued that this potential shortfall in liability represents an external cost not included in the cost of nuclear electricity; but the cost is small, amounting to about 0.1% of the levelized cost of electricity, according to a 2008 study.[73]

These beyond-insurance costs for worst-case scenarios are not unique to nuclear power, as hydroelectric power plants are similarly not fully insured against catastrophic events like a large dam failure. As private insurers base dam insurance premiums on limited scenarios, major disaster insurance in this sector is likewise provided by the state.[74][better source needed]

Because externalities are diffuse in their effect, external costs cannot be measured directly, but must be estimated.

International trade edit

Different countries charge generating companies differently for the negative externalities (such as pollution) that they create. To avoid unfair competition from imports of dirty electricity a tariff may be applied. For example, the UK and the EU may include electricity in their Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanisms.[75] Alternatively the emissions trading systems (ETS) of the importing and exporting countries may be linked,[76] or the generators in one country may be subject to the ETS of another country (for example Northern İreland generators are in the EU ETS).[77]

Additional cost factors edit

Calculations often do not include wider system costs associated with each type of plant, such as long-distance transmission connections to grids, or balancing and reserve costs. Calculations do not necessarily include externalities such as health damage by coal plants, nor the effect of greenhouse emissions on the climate change, ocean acidification and eutrophication, ocean current shifts. Decommissioning costs of power plants are usually not included (nuclear power plants in the United States is an exception, because the cost of decommissioning is included in the price of electricity per the Nuclear Waste Policy Act), is therefore not full cost accounting. These types of items can be explicitly added as necessary depending on the purpose of the calculation.

Other non-financial factors may include:

  • Comparisons of life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions show coal, for instance, to be radically higher in terms of GHGs than any alternative.
  • Surface power density measures power per unit surface area using given technology, and can vary by several orders of magnitude between high- and low-density sources. Surface power density is a significant limiting factor in countries with high population density.
  • Impacts on wildlife include an estimated 888,000 bats killed annually by collision with U.S. wind turbines.[78] Millions of birds are estimated to be killed or electrocuted each year by collision with high-voltage power lines and pylons,[79] and millions more by fossil fuel power plants.[80]
  • Other environmental concerns with electricity generation include acid rain, ocean acidification and effect of coal extraction on watersheds.
  • Various human health concerns with electricity generation, including asthma and smog, now dominate decisions in developed nations that incur health care costs publicly.[clarification needed] A 2021 study estimated the health costs of coal power at hundreds of billions of dollars for the rest of the decade.[81]

Global studies edit

 
Levelized cost of energy based on different studies. Source: IRENA 2020 for renewables, Lazard for the price of electricity from nuclear and coal, IAEA for nuclear capacity and Global Energy Monitor for coal capacity.
Global levelized cost of generation (US$ per MWh)
IPCC 2014[82]

(at 5% discount rate)

IRENA 2020[83] Lazard 2023[84] NEA 2020[85]

(at 7% discount rate)

BNEF 2021[86]
PV (utility, fixed-axis) 110 68 24–96 56 39
PV (utility, tracking) - - - - 47
PV (residential) 150 164 117–282 126 -
Solar (thermal) 150 182 - 121 -
Wind, onshore 59 53 24–75 50 41
Wind, offshore 120 115 72–140 88 79
Nuclear new (existing) 65 - 140–221* (31) 69 (32) -
Hydro 22 47 - 68 -
Geothermal 60 73 - 99 -
Coal (CC) 61 - 68–166 88 (110) -
Gas CC (Peak) 71 - 115–221 71 -

*LCOE estimates for nuclear power from Lazard are "based on the then-estimated costs of the Vogtle Plant and US-focused".[84]

Bank of America (2023) edit

In 2023, Bank of America conducted a LCOE study in which it postulated that existing LCOE estimates for renewables do not account for fossil fuel or battery backup and therefore levelized full system cost of electricity (LFSCOE) would be a more reasonable metric to compare sources in terms of providing 24/7 consumer electricity.[87]

LCOE LFSCOE

(Texas, US)

LFSCOE

(Germany, EU)

Nuclear 82 122 106
Wind 40 291 504
Solar 36 413 1548
Biomass 95 117 104
Coal 76 90 78
Gas 38 40 35

BNEF (2021) edit

In March 2021, Bloomberg New Energy Finance found that "renewables are the cheapest power option for 71% of global GDP and 85% of global power generation. It is now cheaper to build a new solar or wind farm to meet rising electricity demand or replace a retiring generator, than it is to build a new fossil fuel-fired power plant. ... On a cost basis, wind and solar is the best economic choice in markets where firm generation resources exist and demand is growing."[86]: 24  They further reported "the levelized cost of energy from lithium-ion battery storage systems is competitive with many peak-demand generators."[86]: 23  BNEF does not disclose the detailed methodology and LCOE calculation assumptions, however, apart from declaring it is "derived from selected public sources".[86]: 98  Costs of gas peakers are substantial, and include both the cost of fuel and external costs of its combustion. Costs of its combustion include emission of greenhouse gases carbon monoxide and dioxide, as well as nitrogen oxides (NOx), which damage the human respiratory system and contribute to acid rain.[88]

IEA & OECD NEA (2020) edit

In December 2020, IEA and OECD NEA published a joint Projected Costs of Generating Electricity study which looks at a very broad range of electricity generating technologies based on 243 power plants in 24 countries. The primary finding was that "low-carbon generation is overall becoming increasingly cost competitive" and "new nuclear power will remain the dispatchable low-carbon technology with the lowest expected costs in 2025". The report calculated LCOE with assumed 7% discount rate and adjusted for systemic costs of generation.[85] The report also contains a modeling utility that produces LCOE estimates based on user-selected parameters such as discount rate, carbon price, heat price, coal price and gas price.[89] The report's main conclusions:[90]

  • LCOE of specific energy sources significantly differs between countries due to their geographic, political and regulatory situation;
  • low-carbon energy sources cannot be considered in separation, as they operate in "complex interactions" with each other to ensure reliable supply at all times; IEA analysis captures these interactions in value-adjusted LCOE or VALCOE;
  • cost of renewable energy sources significantly decreased and are competitive (in LCOE terms) with dispatchable fossil fuel generation;
  • cost of extension of operations of existing nuclear power plants (LTO, long-term operations) has the lowest LCOE of low-carbon energy sources;

Lazard (2020) edit

In October 2020, the financial firm Lazard compared renewable and conventional sources of energy, including comparison between existing and new generation (see table). Lazard study assumes "60% debt at 8% interest rate and 40% equity at 12% cost" for its LCOE calculation but did not disclose their methodology or project portfolio used to calculate prices.[91] In the 2023 study Lazard explained their LCOE estimates for nuclear power are "based on the then-estimated costs of the Vogtle Plant and US-focused".[84]

IPCC (2014) edit

IPCC Fifth Assessment Report contains LCOE calculations[82] for broad range of energy sources in the following four scenarios:

  • 10% WACC, high full load hours (FLH), no carbon tax
  • 5% WACC, high FLH, no carbon tax — scenario presented in the above table
  • 10% WACC, low FLH, no carbon tax
  • 10% WACC, high FLH, $100/tCO2eq carbon tax

Regional studies edit

Australia edit

BNEF[92] estimated the following costs for electricity generation in Australia:[93]

Australia LCoE 2020
Source Solar Wind onshore Gas CC Wind plus storage Solar plus storage Storage (4hr) Gas peaker
Mean $US/MWh 47 58 81 87 118 156 228

Europe edit

It can be seen from the following table that the cost of renewable energy, particularly photovoltaics, is falling very rapidly. As of 2017, the cost of electricity generation from photovoltaics, for example, has fallen by almost 75% within 7 years.[94]

Electricity production costs of new power plants in €/MWh
Energy Source Publication 2009[95] Publication 2011[96] Study 2012[97] Various individual data (as of 2012) Study 2013[98] Study 2015[99] Study 2018[100] Study 2021[101]
Nuclear 50[a] 60–100 70–90;[102] 70–100;[103] 105[104] 36–84
Lignite 46–65[b] 45–100[c] 38–53 29–84 45.9–79.8 103.8–153.4
Hard Coal 49–68[b] 45–100[c] 63–80 40–116 62.7–98.6 110.3–200.4
Natural Gas (CCGT) 57–67[b] 40–75 93[104] 75–98 53–168 77.8–99.6 77.9–130.6
Hydro 22–108
Wind, onshore 93 50–130 65–81 60.35–111;[105] 118[104] 45–107 29–114 39.9–82.3 39.4–82.9
Wind, offshore 120–180 112–183 142–150[104] 119–194 67–169 74.9–137.9 72.3–121.3
Biogas 126[104] 135–215 101.4–147.4 72.2–172.6
Small-scale PV (Germany) 137–203 98–142 72.3–115.4 58.1–80.4
Large-Scale PV 32 107–167 100;[106] 184[104] 79–116 35–180 37.1–84.6 31.2–57

In the United Kingdom, a feed-in tariff of £92.50/MWh at 2012 prices (currently the equivalent of €131/MWh)[107] plus inflation compensation was set in 2013 for the new nuclear power plant to be built at Hinkley Point C, with a term of 35 years. At that time, this was below the feed-in tariff for large photovoltaic and offshore wind plants and above onshore wind plants.[108][109][110]

In Germany, the bidding processes that have been carried out since 2017 have led to significant cost reductions. In one bid for offshore wind farms, at least one bidder dispensed entirely with public subsidies and was prepared to finance the project through the market alone. The highest subsidy price that was still awarded was 6.00 ct/kWh.[111] In a bid for onshore wind farm projects, an average payment of 5.71 ct/kWh was achieved, and 4.29 ct/kWh in a second bidding round.

In 2019, there were bids for new offshore wind farms in the United Kingdom, with costs as low as 3.96 pence per kWh (4.47 ct).[112]

In the same year, there were bids in Portugal for photovoltaic plants, where the price for the cheapest project is 1.476 ct/kWh.[113]

Britain[d] edit

As of 2022, gas is the largest source of electricity at 40%:[114] its cost varies and being high carbon it causes climate change.[115] So to reduce the share of gas the government annually auctions contracts for difference to build low-carbon generation capacity, mainly offshore wind.[116] Before 2022 these generators had always received payments from electricity suppliers, but that year they started making payments.[117] In other words renewables became subsidy free,[118] partly due to the fall in cost of offshore wind.[119] Instead of gas still dark weeks can be supplied by Norwegian hydropower[120] or by nuclear. As many of Britain's existing nuclear reactors are due to retire soon the government hopes that cost effective small modular reactors can be developed.[114]

France edit

The International Energy Agency and EDF have estimated the following costs. For nuclear power, they include the costs due to new safety investments to upgrade the French nuclear plant after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster; the cost for those investments is estimated at €4/MWh. Concerning solar power, the estimate of €293/MWh is for a large plant capable of producing in the range of 50–100 GWh/year located in a favorable location (such as in Southern Europe). For a small household plant that can produce around 3 MWh/year, the cost is between 400 and €700/MWh, depending on location. Solar power was by far the most expensive renewable source of electricity among the technologies studied, although increasing efficiency and longer lifespan of photovoltaic panels together with reduced production costs have made this source of energy more competitive since 2011. By 2017, the cost of photovoltaic solar power had decreased to less than €50/MWh.

French LCOE in €/MWh (2017)
Technology Cost in 2017
Hydro power
Nuclear (with state-covered insurance costs) 50
Nuclear EPR 100[121]
Natural gas turbines without CO2 capture
Onshore wind 60[121]
Solar farms 43.24[122]

Germany edit

The Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems publishes studies comparing the cost of different styles of energy production. The values for PV installations are based on the average cost between Northern and Southern Germany. The reports differentiate between the two and gives more details.[123]

Levelized cost of electricity of energy technologies (€/MWh)[124]
2012 2013 2018 2021
PV rooftop (small) 170 120 93.85 84.1
PV rooftop (large) - - - 72.1
PV ground (utility) 137 97.5 52.4 44.1
Wind, onshore 73 76 61.1 61.15
Wind, offshore 147.5 156.5 106.4 96.8
Biogas - 120 124.4 128.55
Solid Biomass - - - 112.75
Lignite - 45.5 62.85 128.6
Hard Coal - 71.5 80.65 155.35
CCGT - 86.5 88.7 104,25
Gas Turbine - - 164.85 202.1

The LCOE for PV battery systems refers to the total amount of energy produced by the PV system minus storage losses. The storage losses are calculated based on the capacity of the battery storage, the assumed number of cycles and the efficiency of the battery. The results include differences in PV costs, battery costs (500 to 1200 EUR/kWh), and varying solar irradiation. For larger rooftop PV systems with battery storage, the battery costs between 600 and 1000 EUR/kWh. For ground-mounted PV with battery storage systems, investment costs for battery storage of 500 to 700 EUR/kWh were assumed. The prices for smaller systems are in part lower, as these are standardized products, whereas larger battery systems tend to be individualized projects that additionally incur costs for project development, project management, and infrastructure. The range of investment costs is smaller for the larger sizes, as there is more competitive pressure.

Levelized cost of electricity of PV with battery storage (€/MWh)
2021
PV rooftop (small, battery 1:1) 140.5
PV rooftop (large, battery 2:1) 104.9
PV ground (utility, battery 3:2) 75.8

Middle East edit

The capital investment costs, fixed and variable costs, and the average capacity factor of utility-scale wind and photovoltaic electricity supplies from 2000 to 2018 have been obtained using overall variable renewable electricity production of the countries in the Middle East and 81 examined projects.

Average capacity factor and LCOE of wind and PV electricity resources in the Middle East[125]
Year Capacity factor LCOE ($/MWh)
Wind Photovoltaic Wind Photovoltaic
2000 0.19 0.17 - -
2001 - 0.17 - -
2002 0.21 0.21 - -
2003 - 0.17 - -
2004 0.23 0.16 - -
2005 0.23 0.19 - -
2006 0.20 0.15 - -
2007 0.17 0.21 - -
2008 0.25 0.19 - -
2009 0.18 0.16 - -
2010 0.26 0.20 107.8 -
2011 0.31 0.17 76.2 -
2012 0.29 0.17 72.7 -
2013 0.28 0.20 72.5 212.7
2014 0.29 0.20 66.3 190.5
2015 0.29 0.19 55.4 147.2
2016 0.34 0.20 52.2 110.7
2017 0.34 0.21 51.5 94.2
2018 0.37 0.23 42.5 85.8
2019 - 0.23 - 50.1

Turkey edit

As of March 2021 for projects starting generating electricity in Turkey from renewable energy in Turkey in July feed-in-tariffs in lira per kWh are: wind and solar 0.32, hydro 0.4, geothermal 0.54, and various rates for different types of biomass: for all these there is also a bonus of 0.08 per kWh if local components are used.[126] Tariffs will apply for 10 years and the local bonus for 5 years.[126] Rates are determined by the presidency,[127] and the scheme replaces the previous USD-denominated feed-in-tariffs for renewable energy.[128]

Japan edit

A 2010 study by the Japanese government (pre-Fukushima disaster), called the Energy White Paper,[129] concluded the cost for kilowatt hour was ¥49 for solar, ¥10 to ¥14 for wind, and ¥5 or ¥6 for nuclear power.

Masayoshi Son, an advocate for renewable energy, however, has pointed out that the government estimates for nuclear power did not include the costs for reprocessing the fuel or disaster insurance liability. Son estimated that if these costs were included, the cost of nuclear power was about the same as wind power.[130][131][132]

More recently, the cost of solar in Japan has decreased to between ¥13.1/kWh to ¥21.3/kWh (on average, ¥15.3/kWh, or $0.142/kWh).[133]

The cost of a solar PV module make up the largest part of the total investment costs. As per the recent analysis of Solar Power Generation Costs in Japan 2021, module unit prices fell sharply. In 2018, the average price was close to 60,000 yen/kW, but by 2021 it is estimated at 30,000 yen/kW, so cost is reduced by almost half.

United States edit

Energy Information Administration (2020) edit

Since 2010, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) has published the Annual Energy Outlook (AEO), with yearly LCOE projections for future utility-scale facilities to be commissioned in about five years' time.

The following data are from the Energy Information Administration's (EIA) Annual Energy Outlook released in 2020 (AEO2020). They are in dollars per megawatt-hour (2019 USD/MWh). These figures are estimates for plants going into service in 2025, exclusive of tax credits, subsidies, or other incentives.[134] The LCOE below is calculated based on a 30-year recovery period using a real after tax weighted average cost of capital (WACC) of 6.1%. For carbon intensive technologies 3 percentage points are added to the WACC. (This is approximately equivalent to a fee of $15 per metric ton of carbon dioxide CO2.) Federal tax credits and various state and local incentive programs would be expected to reduce some of these LCOE values. For example, EIA expects the federal investment tax credit program to reduce the capacity weighted average LCOE of solar PV built in 2025 by an additional $2.41, to $30.39.

The electricity sources which had the most decrease in estimated costs over the period 2010 to 2019 were solar photovoltaic (down 88%), onshore wind (down 71%) and advanced natural gas combined cycle (down 49%).

For utility-scale generation put into service in 2040, the EIA estimated in 2015 that there would be further reductions in the constant-dollar cost of concentrated solar power (CSP) (down 18%), solar photovoltaic (down 15%), offshore wind (down 11%), and advanced nuclear (down 7%). The cost of onshore wind was expected to rise slightly (up 2%) by 2040, while natural gas combined cycle electricity was expected to increase 9% to 10% over the period.[135]

Historical summary of EIA's LCOE projections (2010–2020)
Estimate in $/MWh Coal
convent'l
Nat. gas combined cycle Nuclear
advanced
Wind Solar
of year ref for year convent'l advanced onshore offshore PV CSP
2010 [136] 2016 100.4 83.1 79.3 119.0 149.3 191.1 396.1 256.6
2011 [137] 2016 95.1 65.1 62.2 114.0 96.1 243.7 211.0 312.2
2012 [138] 2017 97.7 66.1 63.1 111.4 96.0 N/A 152.4 242.0
2013 [139] 2018 100.1 67.1 65.6 108.4 86.6 221.5 144.3 261.5
2014 [140] 2019 95.6 66.3 64.4 96.1 80.3 204.1 130.0 243.1
2015 [135] 2020 95.1 75.2 72.6 95.2 73.6 196.9 125.3 239.7
2016 [141] 2022 NB 58.1 57.2 102.8 64.5 158.1 84.7 235.9
2017 [142] 2022 NB 58.6 53.8 96.2 55.8 NB 73.7 NB
2018 [143] 2022 NB 48.3 48.1 90.1 48.0 124.6 59.1 NB
2019 [143] 2023 NB 40.8 40.2 NB 42.8 117.9 48.8 NB
2020 [144] 2025 NB 36.61 36.61 NB 34.10 115.04 32.80 NA
Nominal change 2010–2020 NB −56% −54% NB −77% -40% −92% NB

Note: Projected LCOE are adjusted for inflation and calculated on constant dollars based on two years prior to the release year of the estimate.
Estimates given without any subsidies. Transmission cost for non-dispatchable sources are on average much higher. NB = "Not built" (No capacity additions are expected.)

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Machol, Ben; Rizk, Sarah (February 2013). "Economic value of U.S. fossil fuel electricity health impacts". Environment International. 52: 75–80. doi:10.1016/j.envint.2012.03.003. PMID 23246069.
  • Lazard's Levelized Cost of Energy Analysis – Version 14.0 28 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine (Oct. 2020)

Notes edit

  1. ^ At an acquisition cost of 4.2 billion euros.
  2. ^ a b c With or without free allocation of emission certificates.
  3. ^ a b The source does not distinguish between lignite and hard coal.
  4. ^ Northern Ireland is part of the Irish grid

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cost, electricity, source, price, electricity, electricity, pricing, different, methods, electricity, generation, incur, variety, different, costs, which, divided, into, three, general, categories, wholesale, costs, costs, paid, utilities, associated, with, ac. For the price of electricity see electricity pricing Different methods of electricity generation can incur a variety of different costs which can be divided into three general categories 1 wholesale costs or all costs paid by utilities associated with acquiring and distributing electricity to consumers 2 retail costs paid by consumers and 3 external costs or externalities imposed on society Wholesale costs include initial capital operations amp maintenance O amp M transmission and costs of decommissioning Depending on the local regulatory environment some or all wholesale costs may be passed through to consumers These are costs per unit of energy typically represented as dollars megawatt hour wholesale The calculations also assist governments in making decisions regarding energy policy On average the levelized cost of electricity from utility scale solar power and onshore wind power is less than from coal and gas fired power stations 1 TS 25 but this varies a lot depending on location 2 6 65 Contents 1 Cost metrics 1 1 Levelized cost of electricity 1 2 Levelized cost of storage 1 3 Levelized avoided cost of electricity 1 4 Value adjusted levelized cost of electricity 1 5 Capture rate 2 Cost factors 2 1 Capital costs 2 2 Operations and maintenance O amp M costs 2 3 Market matching costs 2 4 External costs of energy sources 2 4 1 International trade 2 5 Additional cost factors 3 Global studies 3 1 Bank of America 2023 3 2 BNEF 2021 3 3 IEA amp OECD NEA 2020 3 4 Lazard 2020 3 5 IPCC 2014 4 Regional studies 4 1 Australia 4 2 Europe 4 2 1 Britain d 4 2 2 France 4 2 3 Germany 4 3 Middle East 4 4 Turkey 4 5 Japan 4 6 United States 4 6 1 Energy Information Administration 2020 5 See also 6 Further reading 7 Notes 8 ReferencesCost metrics editCosts nbsp Levelized cost With increasingly widespread implementation of renewable energy sources costs have declined most notably for energy generated by solar panels 3 4 Levelized cost of energy LCOE is a measure of the average net present cost of electricity generation for a generating plant over its lifetime nbsp Past costs of producing renewable energy declined significantly 5 with 62 of total renewable power generation added in 2020 having lower costs than the cheapest new fossil fuel option 6 nbsp Learning curves Trend of costs and deployment over time with steeper lines showing greater cost reductions as deployment progresses 7 With increased deployment renewables benefit from learning curves and economies of scale 8 Levelized cost of electricity edit Main article Levelized cost of electricity The levelized cost of electricity LCOE is a metric that attempts to compare the costs of different methods of electricity generation consistently Though LCOE is often presented as the minimum constant price at which electricity must be sold to break even over the lifetime of the project such a cost analysis requires assumptions about the value of various non financial costs environmental impacts local availability others and is therefore controversial Roughly calculated LCOE is the net present value of all costs over the lifetime of the asset divided by an appropriately discounted total of the energy output from the asset over that lifetime 9 Levelized cost of storage edit The levelized cost of storage LCOS is analogous to LCOE but applied to energy storage technologies such as batteries 10 Regardless of technology however storage is but a secondary source of electricity dependent on a primary source of generation Thus a true cost accounting demands that the costs of both primary and secondary sources be included when the cost of storage is compared to the cost of generating electricity in real time to meet demand citation needed A cost factor unique to storage are losses that occur due to inherent inefficiencies of storing electricity as well as increased CO2 emissions if any component of the primary source is less than 100 carbon free 11 In the U S a comprehensive 2015 study found that net system CO2 emissions resulting from storage operation are nontrivial when compared to the emissions from electricity generation in real time to meet demand ranging from 104 to 407 kg MWh of delivered energy depending on location storage operation mode and assumptions regarding carbon intensity 11 Levelized avoided cost of electricity edit The metric levelized avoided cost of energy LACE addresses some of the shortcomings of LCOE by considering the economic value that the source provides to the grid The economic value takes into account the dispatchability of a resource as well as the existing energy mix in a region 12 In 2014 the US Energy Information Administration recommended 13 that levelized costs of non dispatchable sources such as wind or solar be compared to the levelized avoided cost of energy LACE rather than to the LCOE of dispatchable sources such as fossil fuels or geothermal LACE is the avoided costs from other sources divided by the annual yearly output of the non dispatchable source example needed The EIA hypothesized that fluctuating power sources might not avoid capital and maintenance costs of backup dispatchable sources The ratio of LACE to LCOE is referred to as the value cost ratio When LACE value is greater than LCOE cost then value cost ratio is greater than 1 and the project is considered economically feasible 14 Value adjusted levelized cost of electricity edit The value adjusted levelized cost of electricity VALCOE is a metric devised by the International Energy Agency which includes both the cost of the electricity and the value to the electricity system 15 For example the same amount of electricity is more valuable at a time of peak demand However VALCOE does not take into account future changes to the electricity system for example the addition of much more solar power could reduce midday value but today s VALCOE does not take that into account 16 unreliable source Capture rate edit The capture rate is the average market price or capture price that a source receives divided by the average price for electricity over a period 17 18 19 20 For example a dammed hydro plant might only generate when prices are high and so have a capture rate of 200 whereas a source that is not dispatchable such as a wind farm without batteries would typically have a capture rate under 100 20 Typically the more of a single type of renewable that is built in a pricing area such as Great Britain the lower the capture rate will become for that type for example if many wind farms generate a lot at the same time the price at that time will go down 17 There can be curtailment if grid connectivity is lacking across the pricing area for example from wind power in Scotland to consumers in England resulting in the capture rate not reflecting the true cost 17 Cost factors editWhile calculating costs several internal cost factors have to be considered 21 Note the use of costs which is not the actual selling price since this can be affected by a variety of factors such as subsidies and taxes Capital costs tend to be low for gas and oil power stations moderate for onshore wind turbines and solar PV photovoltaics higher for coal plants and higher still for waste to energy wave and tidal solar thermal offshore wind and nuclear Fuel costs high for fossil fuel and biomass sources low for nuclear and zero for many renewables Fuel costs can vary somewhat unpredictably over the life of the generating equipment due to political and other factors To evaluate the total cost of production of electricity the streams of costs are converted to a net present value using the time value of money These costs are all brought together using discounted cash flow 22 23 Capital costs edit For power generation capacity capital costs are often expressed as overnight cost per kilowatt Estimated costs are Cost per kW Type US EIA 24 US NREL 25 MWh 25 CF 25 Coal power 4 074 3 075 5 542 Coal with 90 carbon capture 6 495 6 625 Natural gas 922 2 630 Combined cycle 1 062 1 201 Combined cycle with 90 carbon capture 2 736 2 845 Internal combustion engine 2 018 Turbine aeroderivative 1 294 Turbine industrial 785 Nuclear 6 695 7 547 7 442 7 989 81 82 94 Wind power 1 718 1 462 27 75 18 48 Wind offshore 4 833 6 041 3 285 5 908 67 146 29 52 Distributed generation wind 1 731 2 079 2 275 5 803 32 219 11 52 Solar thermal concentrated 7 895 6 505 76 97 49 63 Solar photovoltaic 1 327 1 333 2 743 31 146 12 30 Solar PV with storage 1 748 2 044 53 81 20 31 Battery storage 1 316 988 4 774 8 42 Fuel cells 6 639 7 224 Pumped storage hydroelectricity 1 999 5 505 Hydropower conventional 3 083 2 574 16 283 60 366 31 66 Biomass 4 524 4 416 144 64 Geothermal power 3 076 6 753 46 223 55 396 80 90 Real life costs can diverge significantly from those estimates Olkiluoto block 3 which achieved first criticality in late 2021 had an overnight cost to the construction consortium the utility paid a fixed price agreed to when the deal was signed of only 3 2 billion euros of 8 5 billion and a net electricity capacity of 1 6 GW or 5310 per kW of capacity 26 Meanwhile Darlington Nuclear Generating Station in Canada had an overnight cost of CA 5 117 billion for a net electric capacity of 3512 MW or CA 1 457 per kW of capacity 27 The oft cited figure of CA 14 319 billion which works out to CA 4 077 per kW of capacity includes interest a particularly high cost in this case as the utility had to borrow at market rates and had to absorb the cost of delays in construction and is thus not an overnight cost Furthermore there is the issue of comparability of different sources of power as capacity factors can be as low as 10 20 for some wind and solar applications reaching into the 50 range for offshore wind and finally above 90 for the most reliable nuclear power plants 28 The average capacity factor of all commercial nuclear power plants in the world in 2020 was 80 3 83 1 the prior year but this includes outdated Generation II nuclear power plants and countries like France which run their nuclear power plants load following which reduces the capacity factor 29 Peaking power plants have particularly low capacity factors but make up for it by selling electricity at the highest possible price when supply does not meet demand otherwise 30 The first German Offshore Wind Park Alpha Ventus Offshore Wind Farm with a nameplate capacity of 60 MW cost 250 million after an initial estimate of 190 million 31 In 2012 it produced 268 GWh of electricity achieving a capacity factor of just over 50 32 If the overnight cost is calculated for the nameplate capacity it works out to 4167 per kW whereas if one takes into account the capacity factor the figure needs to be roughly doubled Geothermal power is unique among renewables in that it usually has a low above ground impact and is capable of baseload power generation as well as combined heat and power However depending on the plant and conditions underground naturally occurring radioactive materials such as radon may be released into the air 33 This partially offsets relatively high costs per capacity which were cited as US 200 million for the 45 MW first phase of THeistareykir Geothermal Power Station and a total of US 330 million for the 90 MW combined two first phases This gives a cost per kW of capacity of US 4 444 if only the first phase is considered and US 3 667 if the cost estimates for both phases together hold 34 The source also calls this power plant uniquely cost effective for geothermal power and the unique geology of Iceland makes the country one of the largest producers of geothermal power worldwide and by far the largest per capita or relative to all energy consumed Block 5 of Irsching Power Station in Southern Germany uses natural gas as fuel in a combined cycle converting 1750 megawatts of thermal energy to 847 net MW of usable electricity It cost 450 million to build 35 This works out to some 531 per kW of capacity However due to the uneconomical prospect of operating it as a peaking power plant the owners soon after opening the plant in 2010 wanted to shut down the plant 36 The LCOE of floating wind power increases with the distance from shore 37 The Lieberose Photovoltaic Park one of the largest in Germany had a nameplate capacity at opening of 52 79 megawatt and cost some 160 million to build 38 39 or 3031 per kW With a yearly output of some 52 GWh equivalent to just over 5 9 MW it has a capacity factor just over 11 The 160 million figure was again cited when the solar park was sold in 2010 40 The world s largest solar farm to date 2022 in Rajasthan India Bhadla Solar Park has a total nameplate capacity of 2255 MW and cost a total of 98 5 billion Indian rupees to build 41 This works out to roughly 43681 rupees per kW As can be seen by these numbers costs vary wildly even for the same source of electricity from place to place or time to time and depending on whether interest is included in total cost Furthermore capacity factors and the intermittency of certain power sources further complicate calculations Another issue that is often omitted in discussions is the lifespan of various power plants some of the oldest hydropower plants have existed for over a century and nuclear power plants going on five or six decades of continuous operation are no rarity However many wind turbines of the first generation have already been torn down as they can no longer compete with more modern wind turbines and or no longer fit into the current regulatory environment citation needed Some of them were not even twenty five years old Solar panels exhibit a certain aging which limits their useful lifetime but real world data does not yet exist for the expected lifetime of the latest models Operations and maintenance O amp M costs edit O amp M costs include marginal costs of fuel maintenance operation waste storage and decommissioning for an electricity generation facility Fuel costs tend to be highest for oil fired generation followed in order by coal gas biomass and uranium Due to the high energy density of uranium or MOX fuel in plants that use this alternative to uranium and the comparatively low price on the world uranium market especially when measured in units of currency per unit of energy content fuel costs only make up a fraction of the operating costs of nuclear power plants In general the cost balance between capital and running costs tilts in favor of lower operating expenses for renewables and nuclear and in the other direction for fossil fuels As sovereign debt in high income countries is usually to be had at lower interest rates than private loans nuclear and renewable power become significantly cheaper also compared to fossil alternatives the bigger the involvement of state investment or state guarantees In the Global South where interest rates tend to be higher the shorter construction period of small scale projects particularly wind and solar partially compensates for their increased capital cost In terms of import substitution solar can be particularly attractive in replacing bunker oil or diesel generators for rural electrification as it needs no imported hydrocarbons and as it allows hydrocarbon resources where available to be exported instead 42 43 Short term fluctuations in fuel prices can have significant effects on the cost of energy generation in natural gas and oil fired power plants and to a lesser extent for coal fired power plants As renewable energies need no fuel their costs are independent of world markets for fuels once built Coal fired power plants are often supplied with locally or at least domestically available coal this is especially true for lignite whose low grade and high moisture content make transporting it over long distances uneconomical and are thus less subject to the influence of world markets If there is a carbon tax or other forms of CO2 pricing this can have a significant impact on the economic viability of fossil fueled power plants Due to the ease of stockpiling uranium and the rarity of refueling most Pressurized Water Reactors will change about a quarter to a third of their fuel loading every one and a half to two years 44 45 short term fluctuations in world uranium prices are a risk absorbed by fuel suppliers not power plant operators However long term trends in uranium price can have an effect of a few tenths of a cent to a cent or two per kilowatt hour on the final price of nuclear energy 46 The biggest factor in the operating costs of both nuclear and renewable are local wages in most cases those need to be paid regardless of whether the plant is operating at full capacity or putting out only a fraction of its nameplate capacity and thus those plants are usually run to as high a fraction of their capacity as the market negative prices and weather avoiding overheating rivers with cooling water availability of sun or wind allow 47 48 However in France the nuclear power plants which provide some 70 of electricity demand are run load following to stabilize the grid As a lot of home heating in France is supplied via electric means heat pumps and resistive heating there is a notable seasonality to nuclear energy generation in France with planned outages usually scheduled for the lower demand summer period which also coincides with school holidays in France In Germany some two decades old and older wind turbines were shut down after no longer receiving renewable energy subsidies due to a reported market rate electricity price of some 0 03 per kWh not covering marginal costs or only covering them as long as no major maintenance was needed 49 By contrast after being fully depreciated Germany s then remaining nuclear power plants were described in media reports throughout the 2010s and into the early 2020s as highly profitable for their operators even without direct government subsidy 50 51 52 Market matching costs edit Many scholars such as Paul Joskow have described limits to the levelized cost of electricity metric for comparing new generating sources In particular LCOE ignores time effects associated with matching production to demand This happens at two levels Dispatchability the ability of a generating system to come online go offline or ramp up or down quickly as demand swings The extent to which the availability profile matches or conflicts with the market demand profile Ramp rates how fast the power can be increased or decreased may be quicker for more modern nuclear and the economics of nuclear power plants differ 53 54 Nevertheless capital intensive technologies such as wind solar and nuclear are economically disadvantaged unless generating at maximum availability since the LCOE is nearly all sunk cost capital investment Grids with very large amounts of intermittent power sources such as wind and solar may incur extra costs associated with needing to have storage or backup generation available 55 At the same time intermittent sources can be even more competitive if they are available to produce when demand and prices are highest such as solar during summertime mid day peaks seen in hot countries where air conditioning is a major consumer 56 Another limitation of the LCOE metric is the influence of energy efficiency and conservation EEC 57 better source needed In the 2010s EEC caused the electricity demand of many countries such as the US 58 to remain flat or decline 59 60 For solar systems installed at the point of end use it may be more economical to invest in EEC first then solar or both at the same time 61 This results in a smaller required solar system than what would be needed without the EEC measures However designing a solar system on the basis of LCOE would cause the smaller system LCOE to increase as the energy generation drops faster than the system cost clarification needed The whole of system life cycle cost should be considered not just the LCOE of the energy source 57 LCOE is not as relevant to end users than other financial considerations such as income cashflow mortgage leases rent and electricity bills 57 Comparing solar investments in relation to these can make it easier for end users to make a decision or using cost benefit calculations and or an asset s capacity value or contribution to peak on a system or circuit level 57 External costs of energy sources edit See also Environmental impact of the energy industry and Economics of nuclear power plants Typically pricing of electricity from various energy sources may not include all external costs that is the costs indirectly borne by society as a whole as a consequence of using that energy source 62 These may include enabling costs environmental impacts energy storage recycling costs or beyond insurance accident effects Solar panel performance is usually guaranteed for 25 years and sometimes 30 63 According to a 2021 Harvard Business Review study costs of recycling solar panels will reach 20 30 per panel in 2035 which would increase the LCOE fourfold for PV solar power but only if panels are replaced after 15 years rather than the expected 30 years If panels are replaced early this presents a significant policy challenge because if the recycling is made legal duty of the manufacturers as it already is in the EU it will dramatically reduce profit margins on this already competitive market 64 A 2021 IEA study of repairing old panels to reuse rather than recycle them concluded that the financial viability depends on country specific factors such as grid tariffs but that reuse is only likely for utility solar as rooftop owners will want to make best use of space with more efficient new panels 65 An EU funded research study known as ExternE or Externalities of Energy undertaken over the period of 1995 to 2005 found that the cost of producing electricity from coal or oil would double over its present value and the cost of electricity production from gas would increase by 30 if external costs such as damage to the environment and to human health from the particulate matter nitrogen oxides chromium VI river water alkalinity mercury poisoning and arsenic emissions produced by these sources were taken into account It was estimated in the study that these external downstream fossil fuel costs amount up to 1 2 of the EU s entire Gross Domestic Product GDP and this was before the external cost of global warming from these sources was even included 66 67 Coal has the highest external cost in the EU and global warming is the largest part of that cost 62 Sustainable energy avoids or greatly reduces future costs to society such as respiratory illnesses 68 69 In 2022 the EU created a green taxonomy to indicate which energy investments reduce such external costs A means to address a part of the external costs of fossil fuel generation is carbon pricing the method most favored by economists for reducing global warming emissions 70 Carbon pricing charges those who emit carbon dioxide for their emissions That charge called a carbon price is the amount that must be paid for the right to emit one tonne of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere Carbon pricing usually takes the form of a carbon tax or a requirement to purchase permits to emit also called allowances Depending on the assumptions of possible accidents and their probabilities external costs for nuclear power vary significantly and can reach between 0 2 and 200 ct kWh 71 Furthermore nuclear power is working under an insurance framework that limits or structures accident liabilities in accordance with the Paris convention on nuclear third party liability the Brussels supplementary convention and the Vienna convention on civil liability for nuclear damage 72 and in the U S the Price Anderson Act It is often argued that this potential shortfall in liability represents an external cost not included in the cost of nuclear electricity but the cost is small amounting to about 0 1 of the levelized cost of electricity according to a 2008 study 73 These beyond insurance costs for worst case scenarios are not unique to nuclear power as hydroelectric power plants are similarly not fully insured against catastrophic events like a large dam failure As private insurers base dam insurance premiums on limited scenarios major disaster insurance in this sector is likewise provided by the state 74 better source needed Because externalities are diffuse in their effect external costs cannot be measured directly but must be estimated International trade edit Different countries charge generating companies differently for the negative externalities such as pollution that they create To avoid unfair competition from imports of dirty electricity a tariff may be applied For example the UK and the EU may include electricity in their Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanisms 75 Alternatively the emissions trading systems ETS of the importing and exporting countries may be linked 76 or the generators in one country may be subject to the ETS of another country for example Northern Ireland generators are in the EU ETS 77 Additional cost factors edit Calculations often do not include wider system costs associated with each type of plant such as long distance transmission connections to grids or balancing and reserve costs Calculations do not necessarily include externalities such as health damage by coal plants nor the effect of greenhouse emissions on the climate change ocean acidification and eutrophication ocean current shifts Decommissioning costs of power plants are usually not included nuclear power plants in the United States is an exception because the cost of decommissioning is included in the price of electricity per the Nuclear Waste Policy Act is therefore not full cost accounting These types of items can be explicitly added as necessary depending on the purpose of the calculation Other non financial factors may include Comparisons of life cycle greenhouse gas emissions show coal for instance to be radically higher in terms of GHGs than any alternative Surface power density measures power per unit surface area using given technology and can vary by several orders of magnitude between high and low density sources Surface power density is a significant limiting factor in countries with high population density Impacts on wildlife include an estimated 888 000 bats killed annually by collision with U S wind turbines 78 Millions of birds are estimated to be killed or electrocuted each year by collision with high voltage power lines and pylons 79 and millions more by fossil fuel power plants 80 Other environmental concerns with electricity generation include acid rain ocean acidification and effect of coal extraction on watersheds Various human health concerns with electricity generation including asthma and smog now dominate decisions in developed nations that incur health care costs publicly clarification needed A 2021 study estimated the health costs of coal power at hundreds of billions of dollars for the rest of the decade 81 Global studies edit nbsp Levelized cost of energy based on different studies Source IRENA 2020 for renewables Lazard for the price of electricity from nuclear and coal IAEA for nuclear capacity and Global Energy Monitor for coal capacity Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Global levelized cost of generation US per MWh IPCC 2014 82 at 5 discount rate IRENA 2020 83 Lazard 2023 84 NEA 2020 85 at 7 discount rate BNEF 2021 86 PV utility fixed axis 110 68 24 96 56 39 PV utility tracking 47 PV residential 150 164 117 282 126 Solar thermal 150 182 121 Wind onshore 59 53 24 75 50 41 Wind offshore 120 115 72 140 88 79 Nuclear new existing 65 140 221 31 69 32 Hydro 22 47 68 Geothermal 60 73 99 Coal CC 61 68 166 88 110 Gas CC Peak 71 115 221 71 LCOE estimates for nuclear power from Lazard are based on the then estimated costs of the Vogtle Plant and US focused 84 Bank of America 2023 edit In 2023 Bank of America conducted a LCOE study in which it postulated that existing LCOE estimates for renewables do not account for fossil fuel or battery backup and therefore levelized full system cost of electricity LFSCOE would be a more reasonable metric to compare sources in terms of providing 24 7 consumer electricity 87 LCOE LFSCOE Texas US LFSCOE Germany EU Nuclear 82 122 106 Wind 40 291 504 Solar 36 413 1548 Biomass 95 117 104 Coal 76 90 78 Gas 38 40 35 BNEF 2021 edit In March 2021 Bloomberg New Energy Finance found that renewables are the cheapest power option for 71 of global GDP and 85 of global power generation It is now cheaper to build a new solar or wind farm to meet rising electricity demand or replace a retiring generator than it is to build a new fossil fuel fired power plant On a cost basis wind and solar is the best economic choice in markets where firm generation resources exist and demand is growing 86 24 They further reported the levelized cost of energy from lithium ion battery storage systems is competitive with many peak demand generators 86 23 BNEF does not disclose the detailed methodology and LCOE calculation assumptions however apart from declaring it is derived from selected public sources 86 98 Costs of gas peakers are substantial and include both the cost of fuel and external costs of its combustion Costs of its combustion include emission of greenhouse gases carbon monoxide and dioxide as well as nitrogen oxides NOx which damage the human respiratory system and contribute to acid rain 88 IEA amp OECD NEA 2020 edit In December 2020 IEA and OECD NEA published a joint Projected Costs of Generating Electricity study which looks at a very broad range of electricity generating technologies based on 243 power plants in 24 countries The primary finding was that low carbon generation is overall becoming increasingly cost competitive and new nuclear power will remain the dispatchable low carbon technology with the lowest expected costs in 2025 The report calculated LCOE with assumed 7 discount rate and adjusted for systemic costs of generation 85 The report also contains a modeling utility that produces LCOE estimates based on user selected parameters such as discount rate carbon price heat price coal price and gas price 89 The report s main conclusions 90 LCOE of specific energy sources significantly differs between countries due to their geographic political and regulatory situation low carbon energy sources cannot be considered in separation as they operate in complex interactions with each other to ensure reliable supply at all times IEA analysis captures these interactions in value adjusted LCOE or VALCOE cost of renewable energy sources significantly decreased and are competitive in LCOE terms with dispatchable fossil fuel generation cost of extension of operations of existing nuclear power plants LTO long term operations has the lowest LCOE of low carbon energy sources Lazard 2020 edit In October 2020 the financial firm Lazard compared renewable and conventional sources of energy including comparison between existing and new generation see table Lazard study assumes 60 debt at 8 interest rate and 40 equity at 12 cost for its LCOE calculation but did not disclose their methodology or project portfolio used to calculate prices 91 In the 2023 study Lazard explained their LCOE estimates for nuclear power are based on the then estimated costs of the Vogtle Plant and US focused 84 IPCC 2014 edit IPCC Fifth Assessment Report contains LCOE calculations 82 for broad range of energy sources in the following four scenarios 10 WACC high full load hours FLH no carbon tax 5 WACC high FLH no carbon tax scenario presented in the above table 10 WACC low FLH no carbon tax 10 WACC high FLH 100 tCO2eq carbon taxRegional studies editAustralia edit BNEF 92 estimated the following costs for electricity generation in Australia 93 Australia LCoE 2020 Source Solar Wind onshore Gas CC Wind plus storage Solar plus storage Storage 4hr Gas peaker Mean US MWh 47 58 81 87 118 156 228 Europe edit It can be seen from the following table that the cost of renewable energy particularly photovoltaics is falling very rapidly As of 2017 the cost of electricity generation from photovoltaics for example has fallen by almost 75 within 7 years 94 Electricity production costs of new power plants in MWh Energy Source Publication 2009 95 Publication 2011 96 Study 2012 97 Various individual data as of 2012 Study 2013 98 Study 2015 99 Study 2018 100 Study 2021 101 Nuclear 50 a 60 100 70 90 102 70 100 103 105 104 36 84 Lignite 46 65 b 45 100 c 38 53 29 84 45 9 79 8 103 8 153 4 Hard Coal 49 68 b 45 100 c 63 80 40 116 62 7 98 6 110 3 200 4 Natural Gas CCGT 57 67 b 40 75 93 104 75 98 53 168 77 8 99 6 77 9 130 6 Hydro 22 108 Wind onshore 93 50 130 65 81 60 35 111 105 118 104 45 107 29 114 39 9 82 3 39 4 82 9 Wind offshore 120 180 112 183 142 150 104 119 194 67 169 74 9 137 9 72 3 121 3 Biogas 126 104 135 215 101 4 147 4 72 2 172 6 Small scale PV Germany 137 203 98 142 72 3 115 4 58 1 80 4 Large Scale PV 32 107 167 100 106 184 104 79 116 35 180 37 1 84 6 31 2 57 In the United Kingdom a feed in tariff of 92 50 MWh at 2012 prices currently the equivalent of 131 MWh 107 plus inflation compensation was set in 2013 for the new nuclear power plant to be built at Hinkley Point C with a term of 35 years At that time this was below the feed in tariff for large photovoltaic and offshore wind plants and above onshore wind plants 108 109 110 In Germany the bidding processes that have been carried out since 2017 have led to significant cost reductions In one bid for offshore wind farms at least one bidder dispensed entirely with public subsidies and was prepared to finance the project through the market alone The highest subsidy price that was still awarded was 6 00 ct kWh 111 In a bid for onshore wind farm projects an average payment of 5 71 ct kWh was achieved and 4 29 ct kWh in a second bidding round In 2019 there were bids for new offshore wind farms in the United Kingdom with costs as low as 3 96 pence per kWh 4 47 ct 112 In the same year there were bids in Portugal for photovoltaic plants where the price for the cheapest project is 1 476 ct kWh 113 Britain d edit As of 2022 update gas is the largest source of electricity at 40 114 its cost varies and being high carbon it causes climate change 115 So to reduce the share of gas the government annually auctions contracts for difference to build low carbon generation capacity mainly offshore wind 116 Before 2022 these generators had always received payments from electricity suppliers but that year they started making payments 117 In other words renewables became subsidy free 118 partly due to the fall in cost of offshore wind 119 Instead of gas still dark weeks can be supplied by Norwegian hydropower 120 or by nuclear As many of Britain s existing nuclear reactors are due to retire soon the government hopes that cost effective small modular reactors can be developed 114 France edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2022 The International Energy Agency and EDF have estimated the following costs For nuclear power they include the costs due to new safety investments to upgrade the French nuclear plant after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster the cost for those investments is estimated at 4 MWh Concerning solar power the estimate of 293 MWh is for a large plant capable of producing in the range of 50 100 GWh year located in a favorable location such as in Southern Europe For a small household plant that can produce around 3 MWh year the cost is between 400 and 700 MWh depending on location Solar power was by far the most expensive renewable source of electricity among the technologies studied although increasing efficiency and longer lifespan of photovoltaic panels together with reduced production costs have made this source of energy more competitive since 2011 By 2017 the cost of photovoltaic solar power had decreased to less than 50 MWh French LCOE in MWh 2017 Technology Cost in 2017 Hydro power Nuclear with state covered insurance costs 50 Nuclear EPR 100 121 Natural gas turbines without CO2 capture Onshore wind 60 121 Solar farms 43 24 122 Germany edit The Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems publishes studies comparing the cost of different styles of energy production The values for PV installations are based on the average cost between Northern and Southern Germany The reports differentiate between the two and gives more details 123 Levelized cost of electricity of energy technologies MWh 124 2012 2013 2018 2021 PV rooftop small 170 120 93 85 84 1 PV rooftop large 72 1 PV ground utility 137 97 5 52 4 44 1 Wind onshore 73 76 61 1 61 15 Wind offshore 147 5 156 5 106 4 96 8 Biogas 120 124 4 128 55 Solid Biomass 112 75 Lignite 45 5 62 85 128 6 Hard Coal 71 5 80 65 155 35 CCGT 86 5 88 7 104 25 Gas Turbine 164 85 202 1 The LCOE for PV battery systems refers to the total amount of energy produced by the PV system minus storage losses The storage losses are calculated based on the capacity of the battery storage the assumed number of cycles and the efficiency of the battery The results include differences in PV costs battery costs 500 to 1200 EUR kWh and varying solar irradiation For larger rooftop PV systems with battery storage the battery costs between 600 and 1000 EUR kWh For ground mounted PV with battery storage systems investment costs for battery storage of 500 to 700 EUR kWh were assumed The prices for smaller systems are in part lower as these are standardized products whereas larger battery systems tend to be individualized projects that additionally incur costs for project development project management and infrastructure The range of investment costs is smaller for the larger sizes as there is more competitive pressure Levelized cost of electricity of PV with battery storage MWh 2021 PV rooftop small battery 1 1 140 5 PV rooftop large battery 2 1 104 9 PV ground utility battery 3 2 75 8 Middle East edit The capital investment costs fixed and variable costs and the average capacity factor of utility scale wind and photovoltaic electricity supplies from 2000 to 2018 have been obtained using overall variable renewable electricity production of the countries in the Middle East and 81 examined projects Average capacity factor and LCOE of wind and PV electricity resources in the Middle East 125 Year Capacity factor LCOE MWh Wind Photovoltaic Wind Photovoltaic 2000 0 19 0 17 2001 0 17 2002 0 21 0 21 2003 0 17 2004 0 23 0 16 2005 0 23 0 19 2006 0 20 0 15 2007 0 17 0 21 2008 0 25 0 19 2009 0 18 0 16 2010 0 26 0 20 107 8 2011 0 31 0 17 76 2 2012 0 29 0 17 72 7 2013 0 28 0 20 72 5 212 7 2014 0 29 0 20 66 3 190 5 2015 0 29 0 19 55 4 147 2 2016 0 34 0 20 52 2 110 7 2017 0 34 0 21 51 5 94 2 2018 0 37 0 23 42 5 85 8 2019 0 23 50 1 Turkey edit As of March 2021 update for projects starting generating electricity in Turkey from renewable energy in Turkey in July feed in tariffs in lira per kWh are wind and solar 0 32 hydro 0 4 geothermal 0 54 and various rates for different types of biomass for all these there is also a bonus of 0 08 per kWh if local components are used 126 Tariffs will apply for 10 years and the local bonus for 5 years 126 Rates are determined by the presidency 127 and the scheme replaces the previous USD denominated feed in tariffs for renewable energy 128 Japan edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information July 2016 A 2010 study by the Japanese government pre Fukushima disaster called the Energy White Paper 129 concluded the cost for kilowatt hour was 49 for solar 10 to 14 for wind and 5 or 6 for nuclear power Masayoshi Son an advocate for renewable energy however has pointed out that the government estimates for nuclear power did not include the costs for reprocessing the fuel or disaster insurance liability Son estimated that if these costs were included the cost of nuclear power was about the same as wind power 130 131 132 More recently the cost of solar in Japan has decreased to between 13 1 kWh to 21 3 kWh on average 15 3 kWh or 0 142 kWh 133 The cost of a solar PV module make up the largest part of the total investment costs As per the recent analysis of Solar Power Generation Costs in Japan 2021 module unit prices fell sharply In 2018 the average price was close to 60 000 yen kW but by 2021 it is estimated at 30 000 yen kW so cost is reduced by almost half United States edit This section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Energy Information Administration 2020 edit Since 2010 the US Energy Information Administration EIA has published the Annual Energy Outlook AEO with yearly LCOE projections for future utility scale facilities to be commissioned in about five years time The following data are from the Energy Information Administration s EIA Annual Energy Outlook released in 2020 AEO2020 They are in dollars per megawatt hour 2019 USD MWh These figures are estimates for plants going into service in 2025 exclusive of tax credits subsidies or other incentives 134 The LCOE below is calculated based on a 30 year recovery period using a real after tax weighted average cost of capital WACC of 6 1 For carbon intensive technologies 3 percentage points are added to the WACC This is approximately equivalent to a fee of 15 per metric ton of carbon dioxide CO2 Federal tax credits and various state and local incentive programs would be expected to reduce some of these LCOE values For example EIA expects the federal investment tax credit program to reduce the capacity weighted average LCOE of solar PV built in 2025 by an additional 2 41 to 30 39 The electricity sources which had the most decrease in estimated costs over the period 2010 to 2019 were solar photovoltaic down 88 onshore wind down 71 and advanced natural gas combined cycle down 49 For utility scale generation put into service in 2040 the EIA estimated in 2015 that there would be further reductions in the constant dollar cost of concentrated solar power CSP down 18 solar photovoltaic down 15 offshore wind down 11 and advanced nuclear down 7 The cost of onshore wind was expected to rise slightly up 2 by 2040 while natural gas combined cycle electricity was expected to increase 9 to 10 over the period 135 Historical summary of EIA s LCOE projections 2010 2020 Estimate in MWh Coalconvent l Nat gas combined cycle Nuclearadvanced Wind Solar of year ref for year convent l advanced onshore offshore PV CSP 2010 136 2016 100 4 83 1 79 3 119 0 149 3 191 1 396 1 256 6 2011 137 2016 95 1 65 1 62 2 114 0 96 1 243 7 211 0 312 2 2012 138 2017 97 7 66 1 63 1 111 4 96 0 N A 152 4 242 0 2013 139 2018 100 1 67 1 65 6 108 4 86 6 221 5 144 3 261 5 2014 140 2019 95 6 66 3 64 4 96 1 80 3 204 1 130 0 243 1 2015 135 2020 95 1 75 2 72 6 95 2 73 6 196 9 125 3 239 7 2016 141 2022 NB 58 1 57 2 102 8 64 5 158 1 84 7 235 9 2017 142 2022 NB 58 6 53 8 96 2 55 8 NB 73 7 NB 2018 143 2022 NB 48 3 48 1 90 1 48 0 124 6 59 1 NB 2019 143 2023 NB 40 8 40 2 NB 42 8 117 9 48 8 NB 2020 144 2025 NB 36 61 36 61 NB 34 10 115 04 32 80 NA Nominal change 2010 2020 NB 56 54 NB 77 40 92 NB Note Projected LCOE are adjusted for inflation and calculated on constant dollars based on two years prior to the release year of the estimate Estimates given without any subsidies Transmission cost for non dispatchable sources are on average much higher NB Not built No capacity additions are expected See also edit nbsp Energy portal nbsp Renewable energy portal Electricity pricing Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of energy sources Distributed generation Economics of nuclear power plants Demand response Variable renewable energy Levelized cost of water National Grid Reserve Service Nuclear power in France List of thermal power station failures Calculating the cost of the UK Transmission network Estimating cost per kWh of transmission List of countries by renewable electricity production List of U S states by electricity production from renewable sources Environmental impact of electricity generation Grid parityFurther reading editMachol Ben Rizk Sarah February 2013 Economic value of U S fossil fuel electricity health impacts Environment International 52 75 80 doi 10 1016 j envint 2012 03 003 PMID 23246069 Lazard s Levelized Cost of Energy Analysis Version 14 0 Archived 28 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine Oct 2020 Notes edit At an acquisition cost of 4 2 billion euros a b c With or without free allocation of emission certificates a b The source does not distinguish between lignite and hard coal Northern Ireland is part of the Irish gridReferences edit WG III contribution to the Sixth Assessment Report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Working Group III Report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Chrobak Ula 28 January 2021 Solar power got cheap So why aren t we using it more Popular Science Infographics by Sara Chodosh Archived from the original on 29 January 2021 Chodosh s graphic is derived from data in Lazard s Levelized Cost of Energy Version 14 0 PDF Lazard com Lazard 19 October 2020 Archived PDF from the original on 28 January 2021 2023 Levelized Cost Of Energy Lazard 12 April 2023 p 9 Archived from the original on 27 August 2023 Download link labeled Lazard s LCOE April 2023 1 PDF 1MB Renewable Power Costs in 2022 IRENA org International Renewable Energy Agency August 2023 Archived from the original on 29 August 2023 Majority of New Renewables Undercut Cheapest Fossil Fuel on Cost IRENA org International Renewable Energy Agency 22 June 2021 Archived from the original on 22 June 2021 Infographic with numerical data and archive thereof Renewable Energy Generation Costs in 2022 PDF International Renewable Energy Agency IRENA 2023 p 57 ISBN 978 92 9260 544 5 Archived PDF from the original on 30 August 2023 Fig 1 11 Why did renewables become so cheap so fast Our World in Data Retrieved 4 June 2022 Nuclear Energy Agency International Energy Agency Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Projected Costs of Generating Electricity 2005 Update Archived 12 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine Schmidt Oliver Melchior Sylvain Hawkes Adam Staffell Iain January 2019 Projecting the Future Levelized Cost of Electricity Storage Technologies Joule 3 1 81 100 doi 10 1016 j joule 2018 12 008 hdl 10044 1 75632 a b Hittinger Eric S Azevedo Ines M L 28 January 2015 Bulk Energy Storage Increases United States Electricity System Emissions Environmental Science amp Technology 49 5 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individual consumers whether a residential home or commercial real estate property manage produce and consume electricity can actually make LCOE numbers look worse not better This is particularly true when considering the influence of energy efficiency If you re planning a new big central power plant you want to get the best value i e lowest LCOE possible For the cost of any given power generating asset that comes through maximizing the number of kWh it cranks out over its economic lifetime which runs exactly counter to the highly cost effective energy efficiency that has been a driving force behind the country s flat and even declining electricity demand On the flip side planning new big central power plants without taking continued energy efficiency gains of which there s no shortage of opportunity the February 2014 UNEP Finance Initiative report Commercial Real Estate Unlocking the energy efficiency retrofit investment opportunity identified a 231 300 billion annual market by 2020 into account risks overestimating the number of kWh we d need from them and thus lowballing their LCOE If I m a homeowner or business considering purchasing rooftop solar outright do I care more about the per unit value LCOE or my total out of pocket lifetime system cost The per unit value is less important than the thing considered as a whole LCOE for example fails to take into account the time of day during which an asset can produce power where it can be installed on the grid and its carbon intensity among many other variables That s why in addition to levelized avoided cost of energy LACE utilities and other electricity system stakeholders have used benefit cost calculations and or an asset s capacity value or contribution to peak on a system or circuit level U S electricity consumption 2020 Statista Retrieved 23 February 2022 Energy Efficiency 2019 Analysis IEA Retrieved 23 February 2022 Electricity World Energy Outlook 2019 Analysis IEA Retrieved 23 February 2022 D Agostino Delia 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