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by zertrin
739 days ago
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GW and TWh are not the same unit. You need to multiply by the hours of effective sun in a year (and applying some reduction factor for the fact that there isn't 24h of sun every day, nor that the full production capacity is reached) Even if that doesn't cover the energy demand, the number is not negligible for 438 GW of capacity.
Assuming that the effective full sun equivalent in terms of energy production is only 10% of a day in average, we get:
24 h/d × 365 d × 0.1 × 0.438 TW = 384 TWh I have no idea about the 10% factor, someone more knowledgeable can coreect me, but, we are not speaking thousands of years if the growth continues before the full energy production value is getting close to the energy demand. |
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Or, for simpler calculations, just multiply nameplate capacity by ~2,000 to get the expected annual generation in Wh.
[1] https://www.eia.gov/electricity/annual/html/epa_04_03.html
[2] https://www.eia.gov/electricity/annual/html/epa_04_03.html