SustyVibes

Environmental and Economic Potential Of Solar Energy

source: ThinkProgress

The rapid rise of solar power is one of the most astonishing transformations in the history of global energy use.

A decade ago, solar photovoltaics (PV) was just a tiny sapling, easily dismissed by fossil fuel advocates. Today, after a remarkable 30-fold increase in PV sales in just nine years, it has become a giant redwood forest.

And the giant is still growing, as GTM Research reported in its latest Global Solar Demand Monitor for the first quarter of 2017.

Last year alone saw a stunning jump in annual global PV demand of more than 50 percent. And GTM projects that demand for solar power will continue to rise. This transformation has been driven by steadily plummeting costs for solar (and other enabling technologies).

Indeed, India’s Minister for Power, Coal, New & Renewable Energy and Mines reported Tuesday on a record low price for solar power in a competitive auction: 3.15 rupees (5 U.S. cents) per kilowatt-hour.

In California, solar’s share of demand actually topped 50 percent for a few hours on March 11. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported last week that from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the 11th utility-scale solar generation in California “accounted for almost 40 percent of net grid power produced.”

In addition, homes and businesses also generate solar power with rooftop PV, generating some “4 million kilowatthours (kWh) during the peak solar hours,” that day the IEA calculates, “suggesting that the total solar share of gross demand probably exceeded 50 percent during the mid-day hours.”

As of 2016, California has just over 100,000 solar jobs — a one-third increase over the previous year. The country added a record 50,000 solar jobs last year.

The U.S. solar industry currently has more than 260,000 workers nationwide, according to The Solar Foundation. Their executive director, Andrea Luecke, points out that’s more workers than Apple, Google, Facebook combined. It has become clear that the solar and clean energy revolutions are unstoppable, but which country ends up with how many of those jobs is still very much in question.