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<text id=94TT1541>
<title>
Nov. 07, 1994: Energy:A Sunny Forecast
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ENERGY, Page 66
A Sunny Forecast
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Always cleaner than fossil fuels, renewable power sources may
soon be just as cheap
</p>
<p>By Eugene Linden
</p>
<p> Arrayed along the pipelines of Enron Oil & Gas in the American
Southwest is a series of boxy monitors that transmit data about
the flow of the company's precious fossil fuels. The telecommunications
devices draw their power not from the fuels they monitor but
from shiny panels that capture the energy of the sun. Are these
solar-powered invaders of the oil patch the technological portents
of a coming era? Or are they merely emblematic of the bit part
solar has played thus far in the world's energy equation? No
one knows for sure, but corporate investors, who have been wary
for the past decade, are lining up to bet billions on the proposition
that solar power will at last have its moment in the sun.
</p>
<p> Few ventures have produced more noble failures than the quest
to power civilization with renewable energy from geophysical
forces--the winds, the tides and, most of all, the sun's rays.
"To date the history of solar has been the story of Tantalus:
year after year the prize has remained, maddeningly, just beyond
reach," noted a FORTUNE magazine story. It ended on a hopeful
note: "The period of solar frustration is drawing to a close."
Date of the story: September 1979. In fact, the period of solar
frustration was just beginning.
</p>
<p> The oil glut of the 1980s sapped any motivation to develop alternative
energy sources. Solar moved to the fringes of public consciousness
in the U.S. as the Reagan Administration eliminated most of
the federal funding for research, and big oil companies dropped
their development programs. Result: solar accounts for less
than 0.5% of the power generated in the U.S. today, instead
of the 2% to 5% envisioned in the late 1970s.
</p>
<p> What then explains a renewed romance with renewable energy among
governments and corporations, especially since oil remains relatively
cheap? Shell International Petroleum in London, which forecast
the oil shocks of the 1970s, predicts that renewable power,
particularly solar, will dominate world energy production by
2050. Japan's electronics giant Canon has formed a joint venture
with Michigan's Energy Conversion Devices to commercialize solar
technology. Enron, Germany's Siemens and scores of other companies,
including aerospace firms, engineering giants and utilities,
are also exploring opportunities to plug into the renewable-energy
business. Is this collective corporate madness? Perhaps not.
The world has changed a great deal since 1979.
</p>
<p> Pollution, like the recent oil spill in Russia, and the threat
of global climate change have rudely reminded nations that fossil
fuels carry with them heavy costs even when the purchase price
is low. In the developing world, alternative forms of energy
enjoy increasing cachet as governments wonder how to provide
power for billions of people who lack electricity, knowing full
well that cities such as New Delhi, Beijing and Mexico City
are choking under blankets of smog. Most important of all: renewables
are beginning to earn respect in the marketplace. During the
past decade, improvements in technology and manufacturing have
sharply increased the cost-effectiveness and reliability of
solar-power systems.
</p>
<p> Some forms of renewable energy already compete with the cheapest
coal-powered generators. Wind turbines produce electricity in
California for between 4.5 cents and 4.8 cents per KW-H, roughly
the same as the cost of power from a coal-fired plant. Amory
Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute in Colorado believes
that a new generation of gearless wind turbines will improve
efficiency and lower the cost to 3.5 cents per KW-H by the end
of the decade. Christopher Flavin, co-author of Power Surge,
a Worldwatch Institute book, says that within the next year
India will be installing wind turbines at a faster rate than
any other country.
</p>
<p> Geothermal systems also produce electricity at competitive costs
in some locations. They pipe water past pockets of molten rock
beneath the earth's crust, creating steam to drive generators.
Nicaragua and the Philippines get more than 25% of their electricity
from geothermal stations, and Flavin estimates that at least
40 countries have such resources to develop.
</p>
<p> Oil and coal are facing new challengers even among hydrocarbons.
As recently as 10 years ago, natural gas was considered a dead-end
industry because analysts grossly underestimated global reserves.
Now it is rapidly becoming a favorite fuel of electric utilities.
More than 30% cheaper than oil, it burns efficiently, and it
produces fewer pollutants and a third less carbon dioxide than
oil. World production has risen 30% since the mid-1980s. Because
of its advantages over dirtier hydrocarbons, natural gas may
be a bridge between oil and coal and the solar era.
</p>
<p> The array of sun-powered monitors on Enron's network is one
of many signs that solar's time is fast approaching. The community
of Tennant Creek in northern Australia is scheduled to receive
power soon from what is called a solar-thermal system. It will
use a series of parabolic dishes to focus the sun's rays and
superheat steam, which in turn will drive turbine generators.
The designer, Stephen Kaneff of the Australian National University,
calculates that these modest-size systems can produce power
for as little as 4 cents per KW-H, cheaper than the polluting
gas and diesel generators Tennant Creek now relies on. In California's
Mojave Desert, Pacific Gas and Electric uses a solar-thermal
technology that employs mirrors to focus sunlight and heat liquids
moving through pipes in long troughs. This array produces large
amounts of electricity--nearly 200 times as much as the Tennant
Creek system--for an estimated 8.5 cents to 14 cents per KW-H.
That is at least double the cost of coal power, but solar proponents
argue that the apparent price difference is highly misleading.
They say the cost of oil and coal should be adjusted to reflect
uncertainties over supplies, price volatility and environmental
damage; estimates for the pollution costs of coal, for example,
start at 1 cents to 3 cents per KW-H and range upward.
</p>
<p> For the moment, power from solar-thermal systems costs less
than that produced by photovoltaic cells, which convert sunlight
straight into electricity. Advocates of PV cells point out,
though, that the gap is narrowing and that PV cells have other
advantages. Solar-thermal systems require direct sunlight, while
PV cells work in cloudy weather. Even at 25 cents to 50 cents
per KW-H, PV cells are economical for small amounts of energy
in remote places. Homeowners find solar power less expensive
than connecting to a utility if a house lies farther than a
mile from the nearest power line. Even in urban areas, PV power
can be cost-effective if new installations require costly upgrading
of transformers and power lines, notes Flavin.
</p>
<p> The real growth market lies in the developing world. Solar systems
offer villages the opportunity to leapfrog developed nations
and move directly to 21st century power generation. Mason Willrich,
vice chairman of the U.S. Department of Energy's Task Force
on Strategic Energy Research and Development, observes that
developing nations gain a double benefit from renewable power
because they can manufacture the components of their energy
supply system, thus expanding their industrial base. Building
solar- and wind-energy equipment and installations creates jobs
and reduces oil imports.
</p>
<p> The economics of photovoltaic energy may soon receive a boost
from the work of Martin Green and Stuart Wenham, researchers
at the Center for Photovoltaic Devices and Systems at the University
of New South Wales in Australia. The two scientists recently
unveiled a design for PV cells that has the potential to reduce
the cost of photovoltaic electricity 80%--to levels competitive
with conventional power production. Paul Basore, who oversees
research on photovoltaics at the Sandia National Laboratories
in New Mexico, predicts that within 20 years, homeowners and
small businesses everywhere but in the gloomiest climates will
find it most economical to generate their own solar power.
</p>
<p> Daniel Yergin, president of Cambridge Energy Research Associates
in Massachusetts and author of The Prize, is more cautious about
forecasting the coming solar era; he has watched market pressures
obliterate past predictions about the future of energy. He also
notes that oil and coal companies are not standing idle but
are vigorously trying to lower costs and provide cleaner-burning
fuels. "The critical question," Yergin contends, "is whether
any innovation meets the test of the marketplace." Older and
perhaps wiser than they were in the 1970s, the apostles of renewable
energy claim they are now poised to meet that test.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>