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by pyrale
1024 days ago
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> adding hydro, batteries, wind, and or solar would drastically lower costs. What does "drastically" means? Fine tuning of the grid doesn't require hydro specifically, batteries are not actually used in any meaningful way in countries currently using nuclear, and the projected savings of having such tech aren't transformative: the intraday difference between peak use and low use in a typical winter day in France are about 20-25% [1]. Sure, shaving 25% off your bill is great, but typically it's significantly less than the difference in price between different European countries. As for wind and solar, it doesn't really lower costs of nuclear as there's no correlation (wind) or a negative correlation (solar) with peak winter hours. [1]: |
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Further, there are multiple kinds of nuclear power plants and different ways of operating them, if you want load following you pay a premium that increases as you need to ramp up and down ever faster, and another premium for increased thermal stress etc.
As to wind and solar, you don’t need to match peak production and demand when the energy is so cheap. The goal is cost optimization, if you “waste” 95% of the output from a solar farm over a year but that saves you a few million over doing something else then you build that farm. Further, the cheapest grid includes lots of hydro which is extremely flexible and some batteries. Wind and Solar alone aren’t that dependable but add even just 10% hydro to the mix and the economics look wildly different.
To be fair the economics also dramatically better for 90% nuclear 10% hydro vs 100% nuclear alone.