Does anyone know why no concentrated solar power plants are being developed in North Carolina Like trough, solar tower, etc. They are obviously better suited for the deserts in the southwest but is there any reason north carolina couldn't have them too.maphttp://www.eere.energy.gov/states/alternatives/csp.cfm
8/2/2007 11:27:52 AM
8/2/2007 12:44:41 PM
Yeah, now we just gotta distribute it
8/3/2007 8:01:55 PM
<3 Sun
8/3/2007 8:05:15 PM
so then what happens at night?that is why nuclear will always be superior
8/3/2007 8:13:04 PM
none of this stuff works on a large scale
8/3/2007 8:35:39 PM
8/3/2007 8:41:58 PM
Nuclear cost per kW is like 8 cents. Significantly cheaper than these solar alternatives.Not to mention, a BIG solar array can carry 100-200 MW. The biggest wind-farm in the US pushed 700 MW.The average US Nuclear Plant (keep in mind, built in the 60's, and most running two towers), puts out 1800-2200 MW. That's an absolutely ridiculous difference in scale. New plants being built can reach 1500-1600 MW per tower.
8/3/2007 9:04:45 PM
^When you say solar array you dont mean concentrated solar correct?
8/5/2007 11:26:32 AM
8/5/2007 11:37:51 AM
8/5/2007 12:29:32 PM
8/5/2007 1:20:01 PM
^yeah but have you guys looked into the cost of nuclear vs solar? The new australian solar power plant will cost around 57$ million (US) and produce 154 MW of energy. http://www.renewableenergyaccess.com/rea/news/story?id=46415A nuclear power plant today may cost between 1.7 to 5 billion to construct and produce up to 1,335 MW (largest in US in Arizona).http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0004790.htmlAll these power plants built in the 80's were between 1-5 billion$. So the power output isn't that much different compared to the very large price difference between a solar and nuclear plant.^oh and in regard to the night thing, newer solar tower designs can produce power at night from the thermal energy stored in the molten salts they are on top of.So from the little research i just did on cost, it appears solar arrays are MUCH cheaper than nuclear and have a much better price/output index. I also talked to my buddy who works at Duke energy and he was saying how much money it costs to keep nuclear power plants operational. A solar array on the otherhand requires much less in terms of operating cost.
8/6/2007 9:34:38 AM
^That's PER reactor.Almost every Nuclear plant in the US has two reactors, each rated between 800-1400 MW, that's where you are getting your number from.Which is what makes your numbers wrong. That 5 billion builds twin or triple reactors, which generate a ton of consistent, weather independent power.Also, Nuclear plants are expensive because of propoganda based security policies, they can be made with the same safety level for a fraction of the cost. Just happens that ignorant people belief other ignorant people who always think mushroom cloud when it comes to nuclear energy.I'm a HUGE proponent of solar technologies, especially commercially, but the reality is that we NEED baseline power to replace coal, and you can only really install large, efficient solar arrays in arid areas, which are basically only in the western parts of the US.
8/6/2007 9:57:00 AM
8/6/2007 9:57:38 AM
^which makes it more expensive than existing Nuclear plants, not to mention drastically more expensive than any new reactors that could be built to compete with it.
8/6/2007 9:58:53 AM
^ok i messed up the cost. 420$ million. But what am i missing here? 420$ million for 154MW, but still 1-5 billion for 2200MW (2-3 towers). If you do the math isn't solar still cheaper? Plus that doesn't even take into effect the operating cost which is much much more for nuclear.I mean they'd be around the same price right? For the power output? Then you'd have to take into effect operating costs and such. [Edited on August 6, 2007 at 10:08 AM. Reason : ..]
8/6/2007 10:04:33 AM
if by cheaper you are just looking at the total cost and not cost per MW output..the solar is about ~1 million dollars per MW more than your average nuclear.edit:running actual numbers, an 'average' nuclear plant costing 2.5 billion for about 2000MW of power will cost about 1million dollars less per MW than that solar, and even on the high end say spending 5billion for 2000MW, its still about 500,000 dollars per MW cheaper to go with nuclearthis is just install not operating of course[Edited on August 6, 2007 at 10:08 AM. Reason : ]
8/6/2007 10:05:12 AM
^alright i see it now. I'm still assuming solar would be much cheaper to operate, but that's just a guess because of the crazy security for nuclear. http://news.com.com/Shrinking+the+cost+for+solar+power/2100-11392_3-6182947.htmlI guess solar arrays take up a bunch of land too.
8/6/2007 10:13:11 AM
^operating cost is effectively the same, because the government subsidizes a lot of it's mandatory regulations for security and oversight. It might be slightly higher, but I doubt by much.The other thing you have to keep in mind is the difference between peak output and MWh output. Because Nuclear can run 24/7, while solar can only generate power up to 18 hours a day. From that alone, nuclear trumps solar with another 30-50% higher actual energy output.
8/6/2007 10:24:12 AM
^Yeah, maybe by 2020 it'll be competitive like that article ^^ mentioned i linked to. http://www.seasolarpower.com/otec.htmlThat seems like a cool idea. Using the water as a solar/heat collector. [Edited on August 6, 2007 at 10:27 AM. Reason : .]
8/6/2007 10:26:03 AM
look guys we've all played simcitynuclear always wins
8/6/2007 10:26:53 AM
^^now there's a project that's going to have insane upkeep costs.Actually though, the Wind powered ocean floatilla's are pretty cool, and cheap.^Brian comes in FTW[Edited on August 6, 2007 at 10:27 AM. Reason : .]
8/6/2007 10:27:40 AM
8/6/2007 10:45:03 AM
im expecting to be a millionaire any day now too.the reality is far different from down the road. They neglect to account for what NEW nuclear reactors with reprocessors would cost. Which, btw, is one of the reasons we have such a problem with waste in this country, along with the retarded fact they won't let the plants ship it to Yucca mountain for reprocess or disposal.Nuclear can already be down in the 6-8 cent range with current technology, if we built new plants.
8/6/2007 10:59:07 AM
Yeah i have nothing against nuclear, but if someone says they expect solar to go down to 3.5 cents/kw-h I think that's pretty cool. ^yeah can't reprocessors recycle most of the nuclear waste anyway to be used again? But most current nuclear plants just don't utilize the technology?
8/6/2007 11:02:19 AM
They aren't allowed to under current US law. All waste has to be disposed of, because of the cold war fear that reprocessing plants could leak material to the commies, or be a target of attack.A NEW plant produces about a marble of unusable waste per year. 1 marble.
8/6/2007 11:05:20 AM
According to the NRDC, solar will be cheaper than nuclear. They break down the cost of solar vs nuclear. They say you have a 2.9 billion dollar budget you would either spend on a 3,000-4,500MW nuclear plant with a 25-40 year payback OR you could spend it on a 3,000MW solar array with a 5-10 year payback. It seems everyone thinks they would cost too much and require to many subsidies compared with other forms of energy. http://www.nrdc.org/nuclear/plants/plants.pdfThey say existing plants can compete with other forms of energy, but building new plants would be extrememly expensive. So if the NRDC says a solar array is cheaper, with a cheaper payback period, then what's the deal? Is it just differing opinions?
8/6/2007 11:16:12 AM
that's like linking to green peace talking about how cattle farms arent profitable and so everyone should stop eating meat
8/6/2007 11:24:00 AM
Ah i see. Greenpeace is silly. But despite the source, it seems everywhere says Nuclear is STILL the most expensive energy source in the US. http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/441990/nuclear_vs_solar_energy_which/index.html?source=r_scienceSo this is just because of security reasons and storage?Even the guys at MIT think nuclear isn't currently an economical choice but has hope for the future. currently reading: http://web.mit.edu/nuclearpower/
8/6/2007 11:32:34 AM
not really, most of the world has passed us up in the nuke plant department... mostly b/c they still build them and do more reprocessing (purex not what we are probably going to use)
8/6/2007 11:50:13 AM
^^You might want to look into why China is building nuke plants as fast as possible.Like I already said, the technology isn't what makes the costs so high, its the absurd amount of regulation.from that article:
8/6/2007 11:53:55 AM
^oh i agree. Most of the inflated cost of nuclear is bs, and people need to educate the public so they don't think nuclear is bad.
8/6/2007 12:01:10 PM
8/6/2007 12:04:55 PM
^i've been reading that article and never intended to use it to compare nuclear to solar. I was only reading that link to learn about the current costs of nuclear. As i stated before I learned through that article that much of the inflated cost of nuclear is from security, etc etc:
8/6/2007 12:13:15 PM