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Rapid cost decrease of renewables and storage accelerates the decarbonization of China’s power system

Gang He, Jiang Lin, Froylan Sifuentes, Xu Liu, Nikit Abhyankar, Amol Phadke

2020Nature Communications414 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The costs for solar photovoltaics, wind, and battery storage have dropped markedly since 2010, however, many recent studies and reports around the world have not adequately captured such dramatic decrease. Those costs are projected to decline further in the near future, bringing new prospects for the widespread penetration of renewables and extensive power-sector decarbonization that previous policy discussions did not fully consider. Here we show if cost trends for renewables continue, 62% of China's electricity could come from non-fossil sources by 2030 at a cost that is 11% lower than achieved through a business-as-usual approach. Further, China's power sector could cut half of its 2015 carbon emissions at a cost about 6% lower compared to business-as-usual conditions.

Topics & Concepts

Renewable energyPhotovoltaicsMarket penetrationElectricityFossil fuelNatural resource economicsChinaElectricity systemEnvironmental economicsSolar powerWind powerEnvironmental scienceElectricity generationEconomicsBusinessPower (physics)Photovoltaic systemEngineeringWaste managementElectrical engineeringGeographyPhysicsMarketingArchaeologyQuantum mechanicsIntegrated Energy Systems OptimizationEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityElectric Power System Optimization