I was recently featured in a @simonahac “gotcha tweet” regarding the lifespan of renewable energy projects. There are some major problems with @simonahac's reasoning which I will go into below. I’ll avoid the mudslinging and name calling and stick to the facts. Thread Image
2.) TL:DR The renewables industry themselves and independent organizations claim an average lifespan of wind of 20 years and of solar panels of 25-30 years. I will argue below that the solar numbers are likely exaggerated. twi-global.com/technical-know…
greenbiz.com/article/what-w… Image
3.) @simonahac's overheated rhetoric overshadows two troubling flaws in his argument. 1.) He cherry picks examples of long lived installations instead of examining sources with a larger more representative sample 2.) He relies on manufacturer warranties as evidence. Image
4.) A recent solar industry study with a large sample size reported a 2x faster degradation of panels than has been advertised and modelled by manufacturers. kwhanalytics.com/solar-risk-ass… pv-tech.org/built-solar-as…
5.) kWh Analytics’ most recent figures place the median annual degradation for residential solar systems as 1.09% and non-residential systems at 0.8%. The report states that over a 20-year asset life, project degradation could therefore be underestimated by as much as 14%. Image
6.) In addition solar panels are manufactured in millions. A lack of quality control in many factories means a significant number of cheap panels will retire prematurely. An Australian study shows that ~20% of rooftop solar installations are deficient. smh.com.au/politics/feder…
7.) “Of 4140 small-scale solar systems, mostly rooftop units, inspected last year, 822 were “substandard”, meaning they did not meet Australian requirements and may prematurely fail. This equates to almost 20 per cent, compared to 22 per cent the previous year.” Image
8.) In another example of cherry picking, @simonahac refers to his own solar panels which have a warranty of 40 years. However “In Sydney, the worst-performing 25% of systems had electricity yields at least 16 per cent lower than the best-performing 25% of systems.
9.) Only a tiny proportion of solar households monitor performance according to Solar Analytics chief executive Stefan Jarnason. Analysis of data from over 6000 photovoltaic sites that are not actively monitored found 11% were likely to be generating <1/2 their expected output.” Image
@simonahac's description of nuclear longevity glosses over the fact that many reactors have been prematurely retired for political reasons ranging from anti-nuclear activism, the deregulation of electricity markets or unequal subsidies which disadvantage the nuclear sector Image
11.) If the playing field were leveled & generous subsidies were removed & the costs of grid integration such as transmission, grid upgrades & firming of intermittency were added to the W&S ledger you would be sure that many installations would be retiring prematurely. @pwrhungry Image
12.) Gentilly 1 was a prototype BWR CANDU. Many of the reactors that @shac lists to arrive at his nuclear lifespan estimates were part of a FOAK exploration of the technology to arrive at successful designs which have proven to be very long lived indeed. Image
13.) Simon’s line of reasoning which lumps in FOAK and prototype nuclear in an overall discussion of nuclear longevity would be analogous to including the world's first PV panels created in 1883 by New York inventor Charles Fritts in an analysis of PV longevity. Image
14.) In Ontario CANDUs are being refurbished to achieve lifespans of 60-80 years with the possibility of further 30-40 year life extension refurbishments thereafter.
15.) We made the poor choice to invest 10’s of billions in wind and solar which have done very little to reduce emissions rather than refurbishing Pickering which will be replaced by gas worsening air quality and climate change. Image
16.) In the words of William Blake “Opposition is true friendship.” In the past @simonahac has corrected several misconceptions I held and for that I am grateful. However this attempt at a “gotcha” was poorly argued and contributed very little to the debate. Image

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More from @Dr_Keefer

12 May
@AdamBlazowski is a founder of the Polish pragmatic environmentalist group FOTA4Climate. FOTA came together in 2018 out of a frustration with the limits of the mainstream environmental movement. Check out the interview on the @DecouplePodcast anchor.fm/chris15401/epi…
2.) @fota4climate includes a broad spectrum of experts and activists ranging from energy analysts to herpetologists and characterizes itself as a “tech agnostic group.”
3.) @fota4climate are supportive of nuclear energy not because of a bias towards the technology but rather because they believe it is the most effective means to the end of preserving bio-diversity, mitigating climate change and maintaining human development.
Read 11 tweets
1 May
I am joined by @Heather_mom4nuk on the @DecouplePodcast. Heather is the co-founder of Mothers for Nuclear. She is a materials scientist, nuclear reactor operator at Diablo Canyon and a lifelong environmentalist. anchor.fm/chris15401/epi…
In the words of their website @moms4nuclear is an organization of environmentalists, humanitarians, and caring human beings.
3.) "We were initially skeptical of nuclear, but learned through asking a lot of questions. We started Mothers for Nuclear as a way to share our stories and begin a dialogue with others who want to protect nature for future generations."
Read 4 tweets
26 Apr
I am joined by @E_R_Sepulveda, a telecoms regulatory economist with an interest in the electricity sector focussing on restructuring and privatization for a deep dive of electricity regulation and deregulation and its impacts on deep decarbonisation. anchor.fm/chris15401/epi…
2.) We begin with the first private companies at the dawn of electrification in the 1880’s and the populist push to exert some form of public control to curb abusive pricing, including setting up regulatory commissions to protect the public interest.
3.) Consolidation from this multi-private operator model to the “traditional” monopoly vertically-integrated firm occurred after World War II, when the idea that strategic sectors should be publicly-owned via state-owned enterprises (SOEs) drove a series of nationalizations.
Read 10 tweets
20 Mar
Is China on the verge of a historic moment like the Messmer plan which saw France accidentally decarbonize by nuclearizing its grid in 15 years while electrifying much of its heating & rail? Francois Morin of the @WorldNuclear answers this and more.. anchor.fm/chris15401/epi…
2.) China is currently third in the world in Nuclear Energy capacity with ambitious plans to have the most reactors in the world by 2030. The Tsinghua climate plan calls for a 7 fold increase by 2050.
3.) At great expense in a time of post civil war crushing agrarian poverty and "great leap forward" economic mismanagement China managed to join the nuclear weapons club in the 1964. It was however very late to develop power reactors with its first coming online only in 1991.
Read 7 tweets

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