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by h0l0cube
746 days ago
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> We’re seeing massive declines in storage prices and huge increases in production. Just in the last 9 months I’ve seen LFP prismatic cells from China drop 50% in price (and about 10% in pack volume). Add to that the variety of grid scale storage tech emerging out of R&D into the real world, by the time a nuclear reactor built today is coming online, it will be obsolete. More importantly, as renewables reach overcapacity, we need fast dispatch ‘peaker’ plants, not baseload, which makes gas a better transitional power source than nuclear, and batteries the end game |
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The comp would be the Nth-run cost of an SMR. It’s not something being produced anywhere close to utility scale to be topical over the next 20 years.
The world is bifurcating along renewables + gas (peaker), mostly the West, and renewables + coal (peaker-ish) and nukes (base), more Asia. Batteries may eventually replace some of that. But there are higher-value uses for them than grid storage for the foreseeable future (most obviously transport).
Globally, we are investing $1.5tn into new gas pipelines and terminals [1]. Anyone thinking those are transitional investments that will be written off in the next 20 years is deluding themselves.
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/31/climate/greece-europe-nat...