Efforts are underway to develop a new generation of nuclear plants that would be easier to build, and safer and more economical, but these new designs are as yet unproven.
For the near term, we believe wind and solar farms will continue to be the backbone of plans to clean up the power grid. Once environmental approvals are granted, they can be built quickly, at a predictable cost. Within this decade, we should begin to see a major contribution to power grids from offshore wind farms. For many of these projects, the major rate-limiting step is not the cost of capital, nor is it the physical difficulty of construction; it is the pace at which the environmental permits are issued. Speeding that up needs to be a worldwide focus. However, another bottleneck has cropped up, and it is rapidly growing in importance.
New renewable-energy farms need permission to connect to the power grid and sell their electricity. In some parts of the world, lengthy queues have developed as project sponsors try to win this approval. The issue is to some extent physical: electric utilities have been caught flat-footed by the surge in renewable energy, and did not spend enough money building power lines to handle it. But the problem is also bureaucratic: utilities that are heavily invested in dirty energy still perceive clean energy as a threat to their profits, and thus have no incentive to speed the connection procedure. This problem has become most acute in the United States, where waiting times are now measured in years in some states, but it is spreading around the world. Federal regulators in Washington have signalled that they are about to take the issue on, and governments everywhere need to do the same. If the issue with environmental permits gets solved, these connection delays could become the single biggest drag on the transformation of the power sector.
As the penetration of renewable electricity grows, so will the need to wrestle with its primary limitation: the intermittency of sunshine and wind. For now, the answer is to use fossil-fuel plants, as sparingly as possible, to fill in gaps in the supply of power. This is a role gas-fired power plants are already playing in some countries. Grid-sized batteries are also playing a growing role, particularly in helping to store solar power for nighttime use, with sunny jurisdictions like California and South Australia leading the way. At times, batteries now inject more power into the California grid than the state’s one remaining nuclear-power station. But batteries are still costly, and for years to come, their main role is likely to be smoothing out daily power fluctuations. We still need a method to cope with conditions described by the delightful German word dunkelflaute, or “dark doldrums”— meaning longer periods when little power is likely to be available from wind and solar farms. The electricity may be stored as heat in big, insulated piles of rocks or sand, or it may be stored as compressed air in underground caverns, then converted back into power. It could be converted into hydrogen, which could then be turned back into power in turbines or fuel cells. Such methods would inevitably entail round-trip efficiency losses, but they may nonetheless prove to be the cheapest ways to cope with the problem. A more intensive and serious development programme, with major investments and public policy to support it, is required on long-duration electricity storage.
Another approach may be to move power long distances, so that low wind or solar in one region or country can be made up with electricity from another. This is already happening in Europe, where a string of new undersea interconnection cables between countries is creating a more robust power market. Yet in many parts of the world, new power lines on land provoke intensive resistance. At least some new ones are clearly going to be needed, so the public opposition to power lines is yet another political problem that must be solved if the energy transition is to proceed at the pace required.