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Wind energy costs set to continue to decline, according to Berkeley Lab

CleanTechnica

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Continued technological advancements are expected to continue reducing the cost of wind energy, according to a new survey of leading wind experts conducted by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

According to a new article published in the journal Nature EnergyExpert elicitation survey on future wind energy costs, the results of a survey of 163 of the world’s foremost wind power experts were outlined in an effort to better understand the future of wind energy costs and the possible technological advancement.

Specifically, the surveyed experts anticipate wind energy cost reductions of at least 24% to 30% by 2030, and 35% to 41% by 2050 due to larger and more efficient wind turbines, lower capital and operating costs, and other advancements, as laid out below.

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The study was led by Ryan Wiser, a senior scientist at Berkeley Lab, and included contributions from other staff from Berkeley Lab, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), the University of Massachusetts, and participants in the International Energy Agency Wind (IEA) Wind Technology Collaboration Programme Task 26.

“Wind energy costs have declined dramatically in recent years, leading to substantial growth in deployment,” explained Wiser. “But we wanted to know about the prospects for continued technology advancements and cost reductions.

“Our ‘expert elicitation’ survey complements other methods for evaluating cost-reduction potential by shedding light on how cost reductions might be realized and by clarifying the important uncertainties in these estimates.”

The study looked at three wind applications — onshore, fixed-bottom offshore, and floating offshore. Unsurprisingly, typical onshore projects are expected to remain considerably less expensive than its offshore brethren, while fixed-bottom offshore will be less expensive than floating offshore.

However, according to the report, and as shown below, there are greater absolute reductions, as well as more uncertainty, in the levelized cost of energy for offshore wind as compared with onshore wind.

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Despite expected cost reductions, there is still “substantial room for improvement,” and the experts predicted that there could even be a 10% chance that reductions will be more than 40% by 2030, and more than 50% by 2050.

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The report also identified five key drivers for wind cost reductions: up-front capital cost (CapEx), ongoing operating costs (OpEx), cost of financing (WACC), performance (capacity factor), and project design life. We have seen up-front costs for wind projects decline over the last few years, at the same time as turbine performance has increased, making wind energy ever more cost-efficient and -effective.

The survey reports that the size of wind turbines (capacity factor) will be a key factor in future declining costs. Average onshore turbine generating capacity is expected to reach 3.25 MW in 2030, while rotor diameter and hub height will also increase (135 meters and 115 meters respectively in 2030).

“Onshore wind technology is fairly mature, but further advancements are on the horizon — and not only in reduced up-front costs,” explained Wiser.

“Experts anticipate a wide range of advancements that will increase project performance, extend project design lives, and lower operational expenses. Offshore wind has even greater opportunities for cost reduction, though there are larger uncertainties in the degree of that reduction.

“Though expert surveys are not without weaknesses, these results can inform policy discussions, R&D decisions, and industry strategy development while improving the representation of wind energy in energy-sector and integrated-assessment models.”

Source: CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission.

Joshua S. Hill is a Melbourne-based journalist who has been writing about climate change, clean technology, and electric vehicles for over 15 years. He has been reporting on electric vehicles and clean technologies for Renew Economy and The Driven since 2012. His preferred mode of transport is his feet.

Comments

4 responses to “Wind energy costs set to continue to decline, according to Berkeley Lab”

  1. Peter Thomson Avatar
    Peter Thomson

    I’m a little confused here – the graph above shows LCOE of ~$151/MWh for fixed-bottom offshore wind in 2020.
    But according to this article https://reneweconomy.wpengine.com/2016/vattenfalls-bid-cuts-offshore-wind-cost-faster-expected-49695 Vattenfall’s successful bid for offshore wind is $67.33/MWh for new generation in 2020. This is comparable than the onshore 2020 figure and less than half of the estimated cost for offshore above.
    What am I missing?? Is the bell-curve really this wide? Or do even the industry experts not realise just how fast costs are dropping?

    1. Tom Avatar
      Tom

      A bit of both. The Danes have low install cost thanks to proximity.
      In general the most optimistic forecasts are usually closest to reality. I reckon people under predict because they feel that you can’t have constant reductions. Kind of like feeling that a die won’t be as likely to hit a 6 after it just rolled one 🙂

      1. Mark Roest Avatar
        Mark Roest

        There are some significant, untouched possibilities for major reductions in cost, and possibly significant increases in performance. Towers and blade spars are two of the biggest opportunities, within the traditional overall design. There are also radically different overall designs which have great promise, and some interesting new materials. The designs I am thinking of are proprietary and on the back burner for the next year or two, but could then have a big impact. Floating turbine clusters could be the biggest hit.

    2. Bernard Finucane Avatar
      Bernard Finucane

      They certainly don’t seem to realize that industries cut costs just by gathering experience and building out infrastructure.

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