But there is a >problem< : China copies so good .....
The USA has to copy the german solar revolution too just as it did with our automobile and technology ideas in the 19th and 20th century.Oil is the problem not the solution.
The USA has to copy the german solar revolution too just as it did with our automobile and technology ideas in the 19th and 20th century.

M_B_S wrote:The USA has to copy the german solar revolution too just as it did with our automobile and technology ideas in the 19th and 20th century.




sandu635 wrote:You are making a confusion in compering price spikes with grid stress.

misterno wrote:I am confused
How can Germany be the superpower in solar energy when they don't even receive much sunshine?
Can someone please explain? Something does not make sense.



SeaGypsy wrote:Same thing happened in Aus, re solar subsidies. However the price hs now gone down so much that without subsidies panels are not much different in price to what they were at the beginning with.
The line about folks having their own solar station is largely bollocks as nobody nowhere is subsidizing off grid stand alone systems, they are grid feed. If the lights go out in your street, it doesn't make any difference if you have your roof covered in panels.


SeaGypsy wrote:Same thing happened in Aus, re solar subsidies. However the price hs now gone down so much that without subsidies panels are not much different in price to what they were at the beginning with.
The line about folks having their own solar station is largely bollocks as nobody nowhere is subsidizing off grid stand alone systems, they are grid feed. If the lights go out in your street, it doesn't make any difference if you have your roof covered in panels.




cephalotus wrote:The 50,2Hz problem is manmade and not related to the technology of solar energy. It will be solved very soon. For keeping the frequency stable there is the primary reserve market in Germany. 1MW of primary reserve (+/-) now costs around 15.000€ for one year. Those that are now making the first storage systems to sell reserve capacity do claim, that very soon Li-Ion or NaS batteries will be cheap enough to provide for primary (and seconbdary) reserve capacity.

That sounds really interesting. Have you looked at other options to the intermittency problem of wind and solar besides storage? Energy storage seems like one of the most expensive solutions available. I am curious if you looked at these options:no_wuckin_ferries_mate wrote:About 5 weeks ago, after the sudden retreat of the high Harry and the unforeseen and sudden strong wind it was on a knife edge, and Europe was just one step from the abyss.
As I mentioned before, I am member of a think tank, who is working on storage solutions for solar and wind energy. We will soon publish our suggestions and findings, however, even if we develop a way to store the energy there will be additional costs, and that will only be accepted by the population and politicians if they know about and understand the problem.



cephalotus wrote:Maybe the Chinese will make solar panels (they seem to be quote good at this), but others will make the silicon, the wafers, the glass, the inverters, the factory inventories, the battery systems, the installation, the smart grids and so on...


SeaGypsy wrote:Same thing happened in Aus, re solar subsidies. However the price hs now gone down so much that without subsidies panels are not much different in price to what they were at the beginning with.
SeaGypsy wrote:The line about folks having their own solar station is largely bollocks as nobody nowhere is subsidizing off grid stand alone systems, they are grid feed. If the lights go out in your street, it doesn't make any difference if you have your roof covered in panels.
Households and businesses installing systems on buildings more than a kilometre from the main grid or who have evidence that it would cost in excess of $30,000 to connect to mains power will be eligible to receive the Solar Credits multiplier for the first 20kW of their system installed. Currently the Solar Credits multiplier is a factor of five, so the savings can amount to tens of thousands of dollars for systems rated at the maximum level!


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