When talking about the price of energy produced by fusion, various estimates put it at 'probably about the same as nuclear fission, maybe a bit higher, but it won't have the proliferation risk/contamination risk of fission'.
However, because the tech was '50 years away', it never made sense for private sector investors, so most investment was from governments.
However, with solar and wind now far cheaper than nuclear due to no need for massive capital investments in concrete and steel upfront many years before production starts, does it even make sense for governments to go down this route?
AFAIK it's not at all clear that solar and wind are really cheaper when making up a substantial part of a large-scale power grid that meets our current expectations of 100% consistent and reliable power everywhere, no matter what.
The unreliability of solar and wind requires either hot (constantly running and spinning) non-renewable backups or grid-scale power storage (has never been done so ? on cost to build and upkeep) to guarantee reliable voltage and AC frequency. The cost of that should be factored into determine the true cost of these power sources.
The stability of the grid is dependent on the collective physical inertia of the many tens of thousands of huge and heavy spinning turbine-generator sets that make up the majority of the current generating capacity. Most current solar power sources rely on grid-following inverters, which are not stable without a grid stabilized by a preponderance of large spinning turbines. There has been some work on grid-forming inverters that are less impacted by this, but AFAIK there aren't currently any that can replicate the grid stability provided by that physical inertia.
I'm less certain about wind turbines, but I think they have this problem too. I don't think they're controllable enough to be mechanically synced to the grid frequency.
I'd love to be wrong about this, please prove me so if you can! But I don't often hear these points addressed, and we're not helping anything by ignoring the complexity of the real world.
Inverters can easily replace physical inertia, it just requires technology developed within the past 30 years, and most grid folks haven't thought about new technology for far longer than that.
As more and more intermittent renewables get pushed onto grids, they become more reliable. Most outages are from single points of failure from large generators or transmission. Dealing with highly distributed renewables means that grid ops get used to acting fast, and there's greater redundancy instead of so many SPOF. Kind of how cloud services got reliable by expecting there to be failure and designing it into the system.
Storage is advancing super quickly, is super fast to deploy, and can replace a lot of more expensive things like transmission upgrades.
We have all the tech to replace fossil fuels on the grid with the above. The only question is the final cost. It's likely to be far far lower than using existing "hard" energy, because by the time we can deploy 50 TWhs of storage, it will have gotten so cheap. We don't know when costs will stabilize, but they have a loooong distance to fall.
And we have all sorts of other technologies that will make all this far cheaper: enhanced geothermal, enhanced geothermal with temporal storage based on injection pressure and release, iron air batteries, flow batteries, thermal storage for industrial process heat, etc. etc. etc.
For every area of the energy economy, there are two to three solutions that look promising. Fusion and fission look promising for none. That's not to say that they can't have some serious innovation and start dropping their costs, but nobody currently operating in the field has demonstrated a path. Yet.
> As more and more intermittent renewables get pushed onto grids, they become more reliable
This is called grid firming, and it’s massively expensive.
I don't think that's the same thing, but what expenses are you thinking of specifically? The German grid for example got much more reliable with additional solar.
Grids were designed to operate in tight tolerances. Cycling power levels up and down a lot, while handling the frequency variation lots of renewables inputs bring, wears down the grid without protective measures. Those measures are called firming [1].
Not sure what Germany did (or plans to do—you can run an unfirmed grid until stuff starts failing for several years).
[1] https://www.gevernova.com/gas-power/applications/grid-firmin...
"Capacity firming" will be carried out by legacy gas turbines as they run less and less, and eventually by batteries.
Batteries are also much better than gas at frequency regulation, and even at the prices a decade ago, completely took over the market for frequency regulation in the PJM market in the US. But frequency regulation is very very tiny in terms of power needs, it only takes a very small number of grid batteries to completely solve that problem.
The amount of batteries waiting in the interconnection queue completely dwarfs gas. There will be no "firming" coming from new gas turbines, unless old-school corrupt utilities are able to sneak it by PUCs by creating some sort of crisis and tricking them.
> "Capacity firming" will be carried out by legacy gas turbines as they run less and less, and eventually by batteries
At least among the American TSOs, there are zero I know of that plan to do this. Do you have a source for one that does?
Trillions have already been spent on gas. That infrastructure will need to earn its return through the 2040s at the very least, and that precludes running them exclusively for firming. To the extent retrofits are being discussed, it’s as an add-on amidst full peaked functionality.
> Batteries are also much better than gas at frequency regulation
Limiting solar and wind by utility-scale battery capacity means scaling back EV adoption or solar and wind deployment. The math simply doesn’t work. (Again, in America. Without significantly raising rates. Not sure elsewhere.)
> it only takes a very small number of grid batteries to completely solve that problem
Frequency regulation is one component of firming. Batteries are good at some components, marginal at others. (As a system. Technologically, they're fine.)
Apart from de-industrialised grids, a batteries-only approach has been practically abandoned through the 2030s. It's why we're building so many turbines and abandoning nukes.
If every (second) house would have a powerwall, wouldn't that make the grid stable?
> every (second) house would have a powerwall, wouldn't that make the grid stable?
At 131mm American households [1] and $11.5k per PoweWall [2] that’s over $750bn at 50% loading.
[1] https://www.statista.com/statistics/183635/number-of-househo...
[2] https://www.thisoldhouse.com/solar-alternative-energy/review...
China is starting to mass produce NaCl batteries. They will be cheaper.
And also only Powerwalls produced in this quantity would have way lower prices. My point was batteries are getting cheaper every day.
It could be less stable, if each and every powerwall is slightly out of phase.
But this is something, one can avoid by only allowing well tuned batteries to the grid? Or is this a serious problem to get right?
A powerwall is $12k installed.
That's about 5 years worth of power bills for most people.
What new technology changes things to not require spinning turbines?
Integrated circuits, basically. The term if "grid forming inverter" and the standards are somewhat new. I'm not an expert, but here is one standard, I don't know if it has been adopted or if others are preferred:
https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2023-09/Specs%20f...
And they have been used where? Everything I can find suggests they are theoretical, not in use even on micro grids yet, and many have huge concerns about them being able to support a grid on their own.
Also the technology required has been around for decades it’s not new and no one’s done it yet.
So again what’s changed because it seems like for now there is no “I have a grid and need something now” solution it’s a “maybe one day”
Massive improvements to battery technology.
That’s a non answer - what improvement
It is an answer, in that batteries were used for frequency regulation far before they were used for energy arbitrage.
But the real innovation is communication networks and IC control of the inverter. It's completely possible to create a waveform that modulates and responds to variation in frequency in the same way a large spinning mass would. And if reactive power is for some reason not enough, synchronous condensers are very old technology to solve that.
> grid... grid-scale power storage... stability of the grid ... grid-following inverter ... grid stabilized by ...
The problem isnt solar, or wind, or storage ... the problem is the grid. Were running on a system that was never designed to do what were asking of it, and yes its going to be a number of problems to solve. All of those are jobs, economic action and improvements to reliability and quality across the board.
> I don't think they're controllable enough to be mechanically synced to the grid frequency.
Google, there are a number of ways this gets addressed.
> There has been some work on grid-forming inverters
Yes, we know how, and the race to build them is on... this isnt a hard problem it's just a problem.
> grid-scale power storage (has never been done so ?
Already deployed in a few places with battery systems (hati, Australia both have them. Possibly Hawaii too). We're doing quite a bit of this. Again a quick google will give you a sea of sources.
Battery backed renewable energy with grid upgrades is cheaper today and getting cheaper.
https://www.csiro.au/en/research/technology-space/energy/Gen...
> Most current solar power sources rely on grid-following inverters
There are now inverters that simulate the rotational inertia. They simlpy shift the phase of the generated waveform just a bit if the frequency starts dropping.
And it doesn't require any expensive additional hardware.
I think the solution will come from storage but also from a massive grid-wide ability to shed non-critical loads on-demand. The current grid is built on early 20th century principles, before we had real-time digital communications.
As a though experiment - imagine a 19th century world suddenly getting all of our current digital tech and wind farms and solar power - there would be no point in trying to create a "static" grid where producers and consumers weren't communicating with each other. Every consumer would negotiate power availabity based on momentary price.
Batteries can mimic inertia better than physical spinning objects.
An operator in Australia has seen massive success and profits over the past few years using batteries to out-compete other grid stabilization. IIRC, they have already made enough to pay off the upfront costs. Even better, Australian government was super against the change, but now most places are positive on them because of the obvious success.
Regarding stability, this physical inertia is also present in rotating wind turbines. But I guess exploiting this at a meaningful scale would recquire a level of interconnectivity which boils down to the same issue of cost.
I am however optimistic about grid-scale storage. There is a long term trend of rapidly dropping battery prices, and with recent developments in sodium ion batteries there is no fundamental reason this won´t continue. Another enabler could be advancements in lifespan. This could allow storage being installed inside or near wind and PV, cutting down on space and installation costs. Even then however, grid improvements would be needed.
Some problems still need to be solved indeed, but in my (mostly uneducated) opinion, they seem easier than achieving economically viable fusion. But they do still require large investments in R&D and manufacturing capability.
Wind turbines don't get the same feedback like traditional generator turbines do.
Wind turbines are designed to run on unstable wind speed -- this meant it have to somehow decouple from the main grid
Wind turbines do not provide grid inertia.
They do not spin at 50/60hz, they are deployed with frequency converters to match optimum generation to the grid and spin at whatever speed they can achieve.
They're essentially another type of solar plant.
> grid-scale power storage (has never been done so ? on cost to build and upkeep)
This is out of date. Grid scale battery storage has recently become economic in lots of cases and is ramping up quickly.
> Grid scale battery storage has recently become economic in lots of cases and is ramping up quickly
Being economic and being cheapest are worlds apart.
Solar or wind + utility-scale storage come in at 46 to 102 and 42 to 114 $/MWh, respectively, in terms of LCOE [1]. That does not include grid firming costs [2], which could raise the upper end of those figures to $120 or more, and is based on current storage prices; if everyone tries to build at once, it rises. (On the other hand, there are further economies of scale to be realised.)
Fission clocks in around 141 to 221 $/MWh, which is why we aren’t building it, but $31 at the margin, which is why closing working plants is stupid. SMR focus on lowering capital costs through economies of scale. Fusion by reducing compliance costs. In all likelihood, the solution is fusion SMRs baseloading solar, wind and geothermal energy with peaker industrial processes running during the day. (Hydro can come too.)
[1] https://www.lazard.com/media/2ozoovyg/lazards-lcoeplus-april... slide 2
[2] https://www.gevernova.com/gas-power/applications/grid-firmin...
This is "the solution" on what time scale?
This all definitely sounds like a great way to meet all our energy needs without carbon emissions ... in like 30 years? maybe 20?
We haven't invented "fusion SMRs" yet, let alone commercialized and scaled them. We're still in the extremely early stages of commercializing geothermal at scale. I'm curious what "peaker industrial processes" you're thinking of that can be profitable while running only during high power supply periods?
I think if we build a bunch of batteries, and then they turn out to no longer be useful after all this other stuff scales up, that's totally fine, far worse things have happened!
SMRs are based on the wishful thinking that, for the first time in history, making an industrial facility smaller increases economic efficiency. It's just not going to happen.
I'm pretty skeptical of the SMR thesis, but I think there are plenty of examples of modularization and miniaturization being economically advantageous.
For instance, I just the other day came across an article about how in the first wave of electrifying the textile industry, they replaced big centralized steam engines with big centralized motors. But then they realized that motors made it possible to mass produce small machines and put one at each station, and they turned out to be an advantage.
I think there are a number of specific reasons to be skeptical of SMRs, but I don't think the entire concept is per se flawed.
We also haven't had a big disaster with battery storage yet, which is probably inevitable as the facilites are built out.
A 10MWh battery storage facility, if it were to release its energy all at once would be something on the order of the Chernobyl explosion (sans radioactivity) so certainly capable of destroying a building and killing people nearby. I'm not sure what is "normal" for a utility scale storage facility but 100 times[0] that doesn't seem out of the question
(From Wikipedia[1], the explosion "was estimated ... to be at 40 billion joules" and from unitconverters.net, 40 billion Joules is about 11 MWh[2].)
[0] https://www.energystoragejournal.com/worlds-largest-utility-...
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_disaster
[2] https://www.unitconverters.net/energy/joule-to-megawatt-hour...
That's not a useful comparison. The power of the explosion at Chernobyl, while deadly to the one person immediately next to it, was not the problem that made Chernobyl the catastrophe that it was. That was the radionuclide contamination that it spread and the remaining latent power in the fuel that, if released uncontrollably, would have spread it even further.
A grid scale lithium ion battery, even completely burned up and vaporized into the atmosphere, is not dangerous in a comparable way.
not to mention that battery fires don't release all of their stored energy at once, unlike explosives. Granted, they might burn uncontrollably for a long time, and difficult to extinguish.
Solar and wind are not "unreliable" any more so than any other power source we've used in the past. Just like transformers have been replaced by power electronics in many applications, the reliance on flywheels for frequency stability will be replaced by grid-forming power electronics. There isn't anything magical about this technology.
Another thing that's easy to miss is that, unfortunately, renewables tend to be correlated. An event that reduces insolation over a large area, for example, will affect solar and wind over a large area. So simply over-building is a lot more expensive than it seems when you need to be able to handle tail risks.
> does it even make sense for governments to go down this route?
For past 50 years, we had ["fusion never" level of funding](https://imgur.com/u-s-historical-fusion-budget-vs-1976-erda-...). Because of climate change, there is a sleuth of nuclear startups.
I wouldn't hold my breath for any of the startups. None of them (at least non-state backed ones) seem to have realistic way to the goal.
I remember reading a post from one of startups after rejection from NRC. It read like a blog post after being dumped by a girlfriend written at 3 AM, drunk.
On the other hand, it's not like nuclear is going away, e.g. Uganda and Kenya are planning on nuclear reactors. Maybe we should have a better option to offer than the light water reactors.
No love for Commonwealth Fusion? They seem to have solid backers, technologists & approach.
I’ve been following them since they were giving promising lectures at MIT and I absolutely think they have the most solid approach! Tokamaks are well understood, they supposedly have the same plasma physics as ITER which has been heavily scrutinized and supported by work at JET, and their concept is simple - Tokamak but with very high field superconducting magnets using technology that wasn’t available when ITER was conceived, and apparently higher field strengths mean a smaller reactor for the same power gains. As a lay person the story is simple and that’s good! Then they demonstrated their magnets and got $2B in funding and now they’re deep in the construction phase for SPARC.
I encourage anyone curious to look up videos on SPARC on YouTube. It’s very encouraging! It seems honestly very reasonable that they will see sustained net energy gain for their entire power plant before 2030 (tho SPARC is still a demonstrator not designed for continuous service, so “sustained” means like one minute).
Here’s some videos:
8 years ago:
https://youtu.be/KkpqA8yG9T4
2 years ago:
https://youtu.be/KkpqA8yG9T4
Latest update posted yesterday:
https://youtu.be/w3Giq6NuPYs
As context, they're aiming for first plasma in 2026
https://www.axios.com/pro/climate-deals/2024/05/01/commonwea...
Wonderful, thanks for the context! I knew they originally had plans for mid-decade, but I wasn't sure what their current timeline was.
I have a lot of love for CF. But when I talked to someone who actually knows about the stuff, the business plan of all fusion startups is basically to sell know-how/IP, once a state actor decides to go at it.
That's a good plan, but ultimately, it's going to be a state backed (that's why I have "non-state backed ones" qualifier). CF is going to have a reactor with fusion with Q>1, but commercial product?
China is working on MSR. It has employs something like 700 Phds and 700 support personel for over a decade and has only recently made a research reactor. That's what I consider a serious effort (and that's for far simpler technology).
In my opinion, people underestimate how brutally hard it is to make new technology to work reliably. E.g. Superphenix, sodium cooled reactor had a capacity factor of 7.9% over a decade of production. That was after they had a demo reactor Phoenix with capacity factor 65%.
I think these guys have a viable approach - https://xcimer.energy
> However, with solar and wind now far cheaper than nuclear due to no need for massive capital investments in concrete and steel upfront many years before production starts, does it even make sense for governments to go down this route?
If we would like to stop polluting the air, the future of maritime shipping is nuclear (fusion or fission). China understands that, and invests in R&D necessary to make it happen.
Plus, on ships, there's no competition with solar or wind. And nuclear will actually be quite cheaper than bunker oil, if executed correctly.
I’ll eat my hat if cargo ships go nuclear. Even the US Navy stopped using nuclear for all but carriers. Shipboard nuclear is on another level to regular power plants for many reasons.
This. If you could make ship-sized nuclear reactors easy and affordable, the US navy would be knocking down your door. There's no lack of DoD funding, no lack of operator expertise, and no nimbyism from dolphins, so the fact that the USN doesn't have a reactor in every single Arleigh Burke is purely because it's not economical.
They could put out a big production line of cheaper reactors, but the problem is that their navy boats are a target for missiles, which means larger risks of bad incidents. So they pick carefully
Cargo generally isnt a target in the same way
As much as I'd love to see nuclear powered cargo ships, they do still have to give consideration to the possibility of getting damaged.
Even putting aside exceptional situations like with the Houthis, we tend to get one or two highly public ship accidents per year. It would not be nice to have an incident like that involving a nuke ship every few years.
I feel like the solution for decarbonizing shipping would be carbon capture. Have the ships store the combustion products rather than exhaust them out, then reprocess them back into fuel on land using some other energy source (say, nuclear).
one of the things being looked into is syngas from the carbon in the air, to produce net-zero hydrocarbons.
if it worked out, it would at least be relatively easy since pretty much all our infrastructure is designed around hydrocarbons.
That’s not why they don’t do it, it’s because it’s way too expensive. That fact alone precludes it from being used on cargo ships.
Now ask yourself this: do I want vessels flagged in the countries with the least regulations and the most corruption to be run by a for profit maritime shipping company that skimps on maintenance budgets and crew costs to be running nuclear reactors with highly enriched uranium (weapons grade) anywhere they want around the world, even through pirate territory?
Fuck No I don’t. I barely trust the nukes running them in the USN!
And submarines.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_submarine#United_State...
Submarines are boats.
> I’ll eat my hat if cargo ships go nuclear.
Would you like some ketchup or ranch sauce?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sevmorput
Go nuclear means the future. Past experiments failing is why I said that ships won’t GO nuclear, implying the future. I was a navy nuke, I know a bit about shipboard nuclear reactors.
Does that count as "going nuclear"? Four have been built, and as of now they've all been decommissioned.
I think it makes a lot of sense. You could probably seal the engine compartment for decades at a time.
I read somewhere that running on bunker fuel was the equivalent pollution of 50m cars.
https://sustainability.stackexchange.com/questions/10757/doe...
I think it was russia? that had nuclear powered ice breakers. Made sense as the constant power demands must be phenomenal.
>I read somewhere that running on bunker fuel was the equivalent pollution of 50m cars.
For SO2 and NO2 pollution, not CO2. They are the most efficient way of transportation in terms of CO2 emissions. Ironically reducing their sulfur dioxide emissions is likely what caused the uptick in global temperatures the last two years. https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-024-01442-3
I don’t really buy this argument. Maritime alternatives like hydrogen fuel cells and biodiesel seem like far more realistic plays than installing nuclear reactors on thousands of vessels.
Fuel cells don't scale well to multiple megawatts when compared with combustion technologies. Hydrogen is tricky to store. Most likely option is ammonia in steam or gas turbines or large slow ICEs; next most likely option is liquid hydrogen in the same engines.
Biofuels is also severely limited in supply and will in the future most likely be reserved for aviation, which is a lot more constrained than shipping etc. when it comes to which fuel options can be retrofitted on existing systems.
Ammonia is simply nonsense. It's not going to happen for a variety of reasons. Liquid hydrogen is an even bigger nonsense.
Realistic fuels that are being used now: 1. Methanol. 2. Liquid methane.
How difficult would it be to use nuclear power to make synthetic hydrocarbons?
If using electricity, it's "easy", first you split water into hydrogen and then use the Sabatier reaction. Of course, any electricity is fine.
One could get (much) higher efficiency by using the heat from a nuclear power plant directly (never producing electricity) but I guess that would have to be a completely custom design.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabatier_reaction
Nuclear power by itself? It's useless. It can only produce low-grade industrial heat.
If you have spare electricity (from any source), it's easy. Just capture some CO2 and react it with hydrogen with specific catalysts and at a high pressure. You can get methanol directly this way.
It's more expensive than fossil fuels at the current prices, so nobody cares.
Both of your options have significant CO2 emissions, so they are a no-go in just a few years.
Liquid methane is essentially the same as LNG, which is rapidly becoming the most popular fuel for newbuild ships today. But it's about as environmentally friendly as building natural gas powerplant to replace coal - a temporary solution at best.
Future solutions need a carbon-free fuel, period.
There's nothing wrong with CO2 emissions, as long as they remain carbon-neutral. So if you capture carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and then use it to synthesize methanol or methane, then there are no problems with that.
Methanol is slightly preferred because methane can leak, and it's a more potent greenhouse gas than CO2. However, even most of the CH4 leaks happen near the drilling wells, and in pipelines. It's unlikely that synthetic CH4 will have to be transported over long distances.
Nonsense or not, major companies are literally building ammonia fueled ships right now.
https://gcaptain.com/aet-orders-worlds-first-ammonia-dual-fu...
Sure. Ammonia was used to power buses during the WWII, diesels can burn pretty much anything that burns (within reason). It's not a problem of technical feasibility.
Ammonia fueling infrastructure does not exist, and its failure scenarios are just not going to be acceptable. Meanwhile, LNG fueling infrastructure is rapidly getting built out.
What's worse, ammonia is also produced from natural gas, it's used for process heat and as a hydrogen source. There's pretty much no "green ammonia". So instead of round-tripping through ammonia production, it's easier to just burn the LNG directly.
In future, we can switch to green ammonia, but then we also can use power-to-gas or power-to-methanol instead. Both are more efficient than ammonia synthesis.
Methanol production, in particular, can potentially scale down to very small facilities. In theory, large utility-scale solar or wind farms can have a methanol synthesizer unit, that will produce it when there's more electricity when needed. It can then be transported by regular tanker trucks.
Exactly.
Proliferation will always be a risk with nuclear reactors. We will never have nuclear powered civilian ships, as long as there exist pirates out there. Sure, Russia operates nuclear powered ice-breakers, but there are no pirates in the Arctic Ocean, plus, for Russia the distinction between civilian and military is not all that clear.
As for hydrogen, I think ships are the killer app. High pressure tanks or cryogenic tanks benefit from the square-cube law. If you want them to be economical, they need to be really large. They will never make sense for cars, or even trucks, but they can make sense for trains, and certainly for ships.
> Proliferation will always be a risk with nuclear reactors.
Wasn't one of the promises of thorium reactors a much lower risk of non-proliferation? (Here's a fun question, can one make a pebble bed reactor design with pebbles designed such that if a ship sank, could a special magnetic sphere of a 'correct' size pull in the pebbles but keep a safe distance? IDK but trying to think outside the box here...)
I think it's worth remembering that for the sake of many ships, we do not need the power-density of an SXX or even an AXX per-se.
> As for hydrogen, I think ships are the killer app. High pressure tanks or cryogenic tanks benefit from the square-cube law. If you want them to be economical, they need to be really large. They will never make sense for cars, or even trucks, but they can make sense for trains, and certainly for ships.
The bigger the tank, the more rigorous the inspection has to be to avoid risks due to hydrogen embrittlement.
I'll admit, I'm -less- worried about that property on a train than a ship, but on a ship I think we'd first need to see good evidence we can maintain things of such size on ground safely.
As a lay person, it seems like trains are pretty much always suited to electricity. Adding a power line alongside the existing right of way seems like it’s a pretty straightforward option. What are the conditions in which on-board power storage is preferable?
Hydrogen fuel for merchant ships isn't going to happen. Despite some issues with toxicity and pollution, the industry seems to have settled on ammonia as the main replacement for fossil fuels.
We might actually get more "nuclear powered" civilian ships, in a way. The reactors will be on land, where they can be properly guarded. And the heat and power will be used to manufacture carbon-neutral liquid fuel.
Not to mention modern sail
what modern sail
Sorry - was thinking about this kind of stuff
https://newatlas.com/marine/new-aden-supertanker-sails
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-66543643
ehhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh?
We gotta remember what a lot of the Marine world really looks like, under the covers.
That is, lots of them will use HFO aka Residual Fuel oil or 'bunker fuel'.
Switching to Biodiesel? Probably the 'cheapest' of the options, not sure what if any implications exist from the switch (lots of ships will stop burning HFO in ports and switch to more common diesel/etc, however not sure if there is a difference in some engines with doing so long term)
Hydrogen Fuel cells are likely as much of a 'refit' from a labor standpoint as switching over to a nuclear reactor; Also the general issues of hydrogen embrittelment and the like have not yet been solved AFAIK especially for the volumes needed for large ships, also not sure if there have been a lot of studies as to whether the hydrogen embrittlement problem could lead to larger structural integrity issues on such a vessel.
Nuclear, OTOH, has had at least a few 'non-military' ships (mostly nuclear icebreakers) with good success.
The current 'whitewashing' strategy of cruise lines is LNG, for whatever -that- is worth...
Edit: finger slipped and hit post too early, so a bit was added, apologies!
Why is it impossible to use wind and solar for ships? I mean, most of our history, ships used wind.
Sails are great, but they are incompatible with the way we load and unload ships now. Ports are designed around unobstructed access from the top. Maybe you could make it work with tankers, but people are risk averse with those. Also sail ships need a lot of crew to handle the sails.
Some shipping companies are experimenting with other ways to use wind. You can deploy kites to pull the ship, but that brings some operational challenges. The more promising idea are probably flettner rotors [1]. Those look like big spinning columns and work on the Magnus effect (how wind puts a 90 degree force on spinning objects). Their limited footprint makes them easy to integrate into existing designs, and since all they do is spin they are easy to use with the small crews of todays ships.
All of those modern ideas are mostly for reducing fuel consumption though, not replacing the engine entirely.
1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotor_ship
I suspect we're quite close to ships switching to wind simply because it's cheaper.
Huge kilometer square kites would be pretty cheap compared to the fuel budget of a ship, and clever routing and control systems can probably mean they reduce fuel consumption 80% for the same travel speed.
> The kite in question has been named Seawing, and may help ships reduce their fuel emissions by between 10 and 40 percent
Not KM but 822m seems pretty close. I think you’re grossly overestimating the benefit from the kite. Seating’s current website says:
> A 1000m² sail surface to harness the power of the wind and tow ships. Based on modelling and preliminary land-based tests, Airseas estimates that the Seawing system can reduce fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions by an average of 20%.
I don’t think better routing will increase that to 80% even if you combine it with next gen tech that knows wave patterns and when a slot will be available to minimize speed and energy loss.
We need a path to remove fossil fuels from ships (& planes). There’s also industrial applications that need high heat that solar can’t really accomplish. Finally, solar & wind need insane battery capacity which when included pushes the economics strongly back in favor of fission and fusion.
One idea for high heat industrial requirements is to move those factory locations to places with geothermal power (like Iceland).
We won't see discussions on that until we're serious about cutting fossil fuels.
On its face that seems like a pretty ridiculous suggestion when the alternative is to just build nuclear power plants which don’t have any real geographic considerations and thus can be built next to existing factories that are already built around such things.
Why not hydrogen?
Liquid hydrogen is impossible to work with at large scales, it causes embrittlement, leaks like crazy, has poor volumetric energy density, requires storage in vacuum-insulated tanks, etc.
Molecular hydrogen does not cause embrittlement (neither gaseous, nor liquid). This is a concern in certain chemical reactions that produce atomic hydrogen, but not in any storage applications.
????
It certainly does. The higher the pressure, the worse it gets. And it absolutely applies to storage.
There are companies that sell various technologies for hydrogen-resistant coatings for pipes, for example.
It will have the same proliferation risks.
A fusion reactor is an extremely intense source of neutrons. The neutrons can be used to transmute elements, e.g. to transmute cheap natural uranium or depleted uranium into plutonium 239, which can be separated easily (in comparison with enriching uranium) and it can be used to make nuclear bombs.
Besides producing plutonium for nuclear bombs, it is also easy to use a fusion reactor to produce any kind of dangerous radioactive isotopes that could be used in terrorist activities.
So no, a fusion reactor that uses the fusion reactions that are possible today will not be any safer than a fission reactor, from the point of view of the proliferation risks.
Neutrons are free. You can make a fast neutron source for a few million bucks today. Making a bigger one that can produce usable power is no big deal. The existence of fusion reactors makes absolutely zero difference to the question "who should have fissile material?" You cannot start or stop ignoring that question whether you have or don't have fusion reactors.
> with solar and wind now far cheaper than nuclear ... does it even make sense for governments to go down this route?
If this works without the sun shining then, yes, it makes sense. It is always good to have multiple sources of energy even if only as a form of redundancy. Our world depends on power.
> If this works without the sun shining
HVDC lines are already mature enough that the cheapest route is to just wrap the Earth with them to form a planetary grid.
The sun always shines somewhere.
Is this true? What are the costs per km for HVDC?
Perhaps you're just talking about the Eurasian continent? What do the people of Western Europe do? Connect to the US?
Even then, we've seen with the recent Russia-Ukraine war that control of energy is a useful geopolitical tool with Europe being softer on Russia because of their reliance on their gas.
> reliance on their gas.
... and nuclear fuel and fuel rods from Russia. Which are still not being sanctioned btw. It's peanuts compared to the natural gas, admittedly, on the order of 700 million Euro per year.
Bunch of projects in the works. But building HVDC lines is not cheap.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HVDC_projects
Same goes for nuclear power plants really.
A 2.5GW undersea HVDC line costs $2.5mln/km.
The cheapest nuclear power plant in Europe is the Ostrovets power plant in Belarus, the cost of which was $11bln for a 2.4GW plant.
For that money you could buy a 2.5GW HVDC line spanning the entire EU.
If the earth was a uniform sphere without oceans and mountains, sure.
For general power delivery to the grid I think renewables make a whole lot of sense. But for specialty industrial processes that require very large levels of constant power, I think nuclear fusion is very interesting. I worry about environmental effects of mass industrialization but at the same time, I wonder what we could achieve if we had 100x more power available for this or that industrial process. Would it be helpful in decarbonizing steel refining or other metallurgical work?
I think if we develop the technology we will find a use for it and be grateful that we have it, even if it’s hard to predict today what those uses will be.
I am excited for how much bitcoin we could mine if we had a dedicated nuclear fusion plant.
If you mean "we" as in "humanity", then exactly the same amount. Bitcoin is created per unit time, not per unit energy.
I think fusion has one major advantage compared to other renewables.....its much less resource intensive.
While plasma confinement is currently done via supercooling of electromagnets(from last time I was looking into fusion) that's the major resource sink that I can see. We have massive fusion chambers, but I know some universities have built much smaller scale chambers. And we also can address the helium shortage if we solve fusion.
I'm not sure if fusion will ever get solved or if we will she commercial adoption. I also don't know what the life cycle of a fusion plant would be but its got to be cheaper than the big turbine blades, and more ecofriendly the photovoltaic cells.
One can’t power Tokyo (metaphorical) with sunwind
> However, with solar and wind now far cheaper than nuclear
They are not cheaper. They produce very low-quality electricity. If you want them to provide any supply guarantees, their price skyrockets.
It makes a lot of sense, nuclear is nearly 100% reliable. Weather (wind) has wild swings. Solar is -pretty- good but can still swing around a lot and we simply don’t have the grid scale level of batteries that need to smooth it out. I’ve seen estimates that we need battery tech with 10-20x energy density(at current cost levels) what we currently have to make a viable replacement for classical energy sources (coal, natural gas, nuclear)
the cost of solar/wind depends on how much solar/wind is actually deployed.
1kWh of solar delivered midday, when there is 20% penetration? easy peasy.
1kWh of solar delivered at 2AM, when there is 65% penetration? much much more difficult.
These types of price comparisons are always unfair, always apples and oranges, because they always compare a 2AM kWh of nuclear with a midday kWh of solar, and of course solar wins that comparison.
The price of fission will hopefully come down over the next decade via reduced regulations and higher production rates (of smaller reactors).
A bit tiring to see the price of solar and wind being compared to nuclear. Nuclear can produce electricity on demand. Solar and wind cannot. You need to pair them with either some humongous energy storage facilities (and then you need to also over-provision), or some other on-demand source of electricity. Once you factored those costs, then you are not comparing apples and oranges.
Nuclear really isn't anywhere close to 'on demand' at least if you consider unit economics. It really wants to be just 'on' instead.
1) even if it was, over producing electricity isn't really the problem
2) it isn't. Modern reactors are designed to do load following. The French do that nationwide on a daily basis.
Technically you can but you spent however many billion euro and aren’t utilizing the capacity. Maybe it still makes sense vs keeping coal and gas underutilized, I don’t know.
If you allow yourself to use carbon energy (coal and gas) then it absolutely makes sense to use them to compensate for the variability of wind. That's what the UK does. Their cost is pretty much proportional to their utilisation so it makes sense to switch them on and off.
You also have hydro but it's a fairly limited (there are only so many valleys you can flood and so much water you can capture - plus historically it's the source of energy that killed the most people).
But if you truly decarbonise, and in absence of an economical way to store vast amounts of energy for a long time (wind can be down to pretty much zero for weeks on a typical year), and I don't see any such facility being built at scale, I am not sure what else than nuclear you can use to compensate for the volatility of wind. And because nuclear costs the same whether you use it or not, you then might as well save yourself the construction of a wind farm.
That's why I don't understand why we are spending billions building those gigantic wind farms. They only make sense if the intention is to keep using carbon. Otherwise they should spend that money on nuclear.
> However, with solar and wind now far cheaper than nuclear due to no need for massive capital investments in concrete and steel upfront many years before production starts, does it even make sense for governments to go down this route?
Cheaper per watts generated, which aren't constant. Cheaper for a constant output? Reliable to actually power a full grid through downturns such as storms, winters, etc? No, not really. There are exactly zero currently available widely usable grid scale (being able to have enough capacity to power the grid for up to days at a time) solutions. Pumped up hydro is the only one coming close, but it's expensive and it requires specific geography. Just saying "batteries" or "supply and demand by load shedding" doesn't magically solve this problem.
We don't have enough production of basic materials like steel to scale solar and (especially) wind to cover our entire energy needs, regardless of energy storage. Fission and fusion will become inevitable in a decade or two.
Why do we have to make solar panel infrastructure (grilles, consoles etc.) from steel? I'm sure more common materials can be used.
I don’t know if the statement you are replying to is correct “we don’t have enough steel” but what I can say is steel (well, iron) is about the most common material on earth. I’m surprised to see that aluminum is slightly more abundant, but they are similar.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth%27s_crust
However this chart shows that iron represents more than 94% of all metals mined. That is, iron (used to make steel) is the most commonly mined metal by far. So actually more common materials can’t be used as no more common metal exists.
Earth is almost entirely iron, but Aluminum floats in iron so it ends up being a large amount of the crust. But yeah, if we're ever like "gee we don't have enough iron" then we've far surpassed all other possible natural resource limits of the planet.
The current production of 1.9 billion tons of steel per year is something you consider insufficient?
I don't know how much steel we need per square meter of PV (e.g. frames can be made from wood), but I do know the area we need for the current global electrical demand of 2 TW even after accounting for capacity factor and not just cell efficiency, and that our current production in each year is sufficient to put a contiguous 2 mm layer behind all of it:
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=%281.9e9%20tons%20%2F%2...
Given the panels are supposed to last 25 years, even at steady-state replacement rates, and assuming zero growth in the steel sector, and assuming none of that steel gets recycled when the cells themselves need refurbishment or replacement, that doesn't seem to be a real problem to me.
Depends on whether we want to reach a qualitatively different (and better) level of civilization, or at best stay at the current level (but in a carbon-neutral way).