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  • It's astonishing, but clean energy from the sun, solar energy, has become the

  • cheapest way to generate electricity.

  • It's even cheaper than coal.

  • And yet it produces only three percent of the world's electricity.

  • Why aren't we using way, way more of it?

  • How did it get so cheap?

  • And what does all this have to do with...

  • ducks?!

  • Let's find out.

  • First, let's take a look at how much the price for solar has fallen.

  • "I started this job as an analyst for solar in 2005 and then I thought solar was

  • ridiculously expensive."

  • Jenny Chase is the head solar analyst at research firm BloombergNEF.

  • "You'd pay about 4$ a watt for a solar panel.

  • And today, you'd pay about 20 cents for that same watt."

  • And that is just the last fifteen years.

  • If you look further back, the price drop is even more impressive.

  • How did this happen?

  • "It's been a long storybut it's unbelievable!"

  • Gregory Nemet has written a book about this.

  • "No one country did it. It was an exchange of one country building on another.

  • One: the US created the technology."

  • The modern-day solar cell made from silicon was invented in the US in 1954.

  • Back then it mainly got used in the space industry and was still super expensive.

  • But as the technology progressed, prices started to fall.

  • "Two: Germany created a market."

  • In 2000, Germany passed a law to boost renewable energy development.

  • This was big because it put a fixed price on energy generated from sources like

  • wind or solar.

  • That gave people and companies a reason to set up solar panels.

  • And for them to do that, someone needed to build these solar panels.

  • Three: China made it cheap.

  • Once the German law had come into force, China really started to pump out

  • those solar cells.

  • "So basically it built the whole industry for this on a scale that the West really

  • didn't keep up with."

  • "China was almost a non-existent player 20 years ago. And today they're

  • the biggest producer of solar panels, about 70 percent of the world's production."

  • So this is how we ended up where we are nowwith clean energy

  • that also makes business sense.

  • But if solar is so great, why don't we rely on it much, much more and just switch

  • off all these dirty power plants?

  • Well, solar has always had this one big problem.

  • It only really works when the sun is shining.

  • When it's cloudy oreven worsedark, even the best solar cells

  • are pretty useless.

  • And that's a real shame because that's when we'd need them the most.

  • Let's take a look at how we use energy.

  • In the morning, when most people get up and get ready, we need energy.

  • The so-called duck curve charts our demand

  • for power from non-renewable sources

  • like coal and gas throughout the day

  • first, in places without much solar.

  • After the morning spike,

  • it stays pretty level.

  • When people come home in the evening,

  • it goes up again and then drops at night.

  • At this point, you might get an idea why they call it the duck curve.

  • Because it kind of looks like a duck.

  • Anyway, in places with lots of solar,

  • like California, this curve changes.

  • The mornings are pretty much the same.

  • Then the sun rises and solar energy

  • production kicks in.

  • This lets demand for non-renewable energy drop.

  • Until the sun sets, that is.

  • That is when conventional demand shoots up again,

  • way steeper than in the first curve.

  • Two problems with this.

  • One: traditional power plants suck at ramping up this quickly.

  • That means you have to keep them running at a certain output all day, even though

  • there's lots of solar.

  • And that means

  • "…you can end up with actually more power produced in the middle

  • of the day than is used."

  • And that leads to the second problem.

  • There are limits to how much energy you can put into the grid.

  • Too much solar could overpower it, so it needs to be thrown away.

  • This has always made it super difficult to

  • add lots of solar to power systems.

  • But guess what,

  • there is now a solution to this.

  • And chances are you have part of it in

  • front of you right now, a lithium-ion battery.

  • "We're just taking the same construction,

  • stringing together many, many of those

  • cells and making battery packs

  • that we can use for cars.

  • And then we can also scale that up to use for stationary power to go next to wind

  • parks or solar farms."

  • "What's been quite good

  • over the last few years is that

  • batteries have got a lot cheaper as well.

  • And we're now seeing solar projects built with a couple of hours of storage in the

  • battery so that they could shift some generation from the middle of the day to

  • the eveningwhere there's often a peak in electricity demand."

  • In the US, for example, the state of New Mexico just decided to shut down a coal plantand

  • instead build new solar farms that store large amounts of the energy they

  • produce in batteries.

  • Lithium-ion batteries have become a lot better and a lot cheaper than expected in

  • the last few years.

  • They're now a viable option for storing and shifting at least a few hours' worth

  • of solar energy as needed.

  • So, the storage problem that solar always had is actually not that much of

  • a problem anymore.

  • Sometimes, though, we might want longer-term storage.

  • In places without much sunshine, for example.

  • And that's why companies are offering other solutions.

  • Let's just run through a few.

  • Another type of battery, called a flow battery,

  • separates the charge outside a cell.

  • That has two advantages: It can store more energyand for longer.

  • The problem is: they're still relatively expensive.

  • Then there's pumped hydro storage, which is already used quite a bit.

  • You need two lakes and one of them needs to be on a hill.

  • During the day, you use solar energy to pump water from the lower lake up to

  • the higher lake.

  • When you need energy at night, you can just let it run down through a turbine.

  • But for that you need to find lakes and, well, a hill.

  • Another solution using gravity comes from a Swiss company.

  • It's working on a tower that raises building blocks with solar energy, and

  • then releases the energy by lowering them again.

  • But for this too, you need space.

  • And there's also the option of using solar to produce hydrogen.

  • And with that hydrogen you could then do a number of things, like fuel cars or

  • even make steel.

  • But the whole process is still pretty costly.

  • "I think that the storage will mostly be lithium-ion with some hydrogen and maybe a

  • few other options."

  • "There are alternatives.

  • It's just that lithium-ion batteries are becoming so flexible and so inexpensive that

  • it'll be hard for these alternatives to compete.

  • But they do have other attributes, like they hold a charge longer, which could

  • turn out to play a pretty important role in some applications."

  • So solar has become cheap and has pretty much fixed its biggest problem.

  • So what's next?

  • "It's going to be big.

  • It's going to be everywhere.

  • We forecast that even with no further policy, solar would supply about

  • 23 percent of global electricity by 2050.

  • I personally think it's going to be much higher than that."

  • "I would not be surprised if by 2030, we're talking about solar doing

  • a large part of the world's electricity supply."

  • Solar has come a long, long way.

  • But now that the technology is in place, it really looks like it's time to shine.

  • Now we'd like to hear from you!

  • What are your thoughts on solar energy?

  • Let us know in the comments and hit subscribe

  • for more videos like this every Friday.

It's astonishing, but clean energy from the sun, solar energy, has become the

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