Climate ChangeRenewable Energy

Study: The High Cost of Wind, Solar, and Batteries

The Failed War Against Fossil Fuels

Recent studies make it clear that the only possible rationale for renewable energy—making significant reductions of CO2 emissions—cannot be achieved. The costs of attempting to do this with renewables are already imposing heavy costs on economies across the world and will rapidly escalate as the grid penetration of renewables increases. As several European countries have already experienced as they plunged into energy poverty, the costs are simply too great for any society to pay.

Key Points

  • Renewables Can’t Compete: In the real world, the capital costs of wind generation per kilowatt are three times that of baseline natural gas generation; the costs of solar and batteries are more than four times greater
  • War Against Fossil Fuels: Renewables are overwhelming the electric grid today because of a 50-year war against fossil fuels and hundreds of billions of dollars of subsidies
  • The No Fuel Cost Myth: Even with no fuel costs renewables still can’t overcome their high capital costs to become competitive with natural gas generation
  • Electrification: The cost of meeting the electrification mandates in Oregon and Washington with renewable generation will cost $549 billion through 2050, more than 10 times the cost of using natural gas and nuclear generation
  • Reliability Costs: the reliability costs of renewables increase dramatically because wind, solar and battery storage must be ‘overbuilt’ to account for their intermittency

Read the full report.

Bill Peacock

Bill Peacock, the editor of Free Market Energy Report, has spent the last 30+ years fighting for liberty at the local, state, and national level by combining his love for theology, economics, and public policy. He has worked in the Texas Legislature, with two state agencies, and for the Texas Public Policy Foundation. His work on energy issues spans more than 20 years. Bill wrote a chapter, The Energy-Climate Connection, in the book, Climate and Energy: The Case for Realism. Bill also writes at ExcellentThought on Substack, about the intersection of faith, culture, and public policy. In his work and writing, he focuses on various issues including energy, regulatory, and fiscal policy, property rights, public education, and the relationship between faith, free markets, and economic prosperity. Bill lives with his wife and son in the Texas Hill Country where they attend a Reformed church.