You are misinterpreting the data presented. First and foremost they are basing an opinion on technology that does not exist yet which is what I keep trying to tell you, but some reason do not want to hear. The model is not telling ESOI or EROI of a lithium battery is 32. All their opinions are based on a lithium battery that does not exist. No such thing as a lithium battery that has 10K to 20K cycles to 80% DOD. There is no such thing as a 40 to 75 year battery.
What the article is discussing is Solar and Wind do not produce power when there is demand, thus it has to be shut off or what they call curtailment. Solar EROI is so poor it is not even discussed and focused on Wind power using TX as the model because TX is the largest RE energy producer in the world. So large you can add up all other states production and they still come in second place. However most of the possible Wind Energy is just turned off because there is no demand for it or put another way any place to send it too. So they turn it off aka curtailment as a code word.
The model is based on using batteries that do not exist to store that excess energy when there is no place for it to go and be stored to be used during peak demand times. Keep in mind al that wind energy is in the TX high plains hundreds of miles from where it is used in DFW. Commercial wind and solar is only feasible in very small geographic area located a considerable distance from population densities.
What it boils down to is wind is economically possible to supplement the grid in certain areas of the country if a battery existed to store the energy. Solar no matter where located or what battery exist is not feasible or usable. A solar panel in AZ has an EROI of 3 to 5. That same solar panel in TX is on the order of 2 to 4, in yankee country less than 1, in the Pacific Northwest is a joke of less than 1. You cannot apply an EROI for solar in AZ to the world. Solar and Wind are geographically limited and Wind has the largest area, solar is on a very small area where it can be used in places no one wants to live.
What the article is discussing is Solar and Wind do not produce power when there is demand, thus it has to be shut off or what they call curtailment. Solar EROI is so poor it is not even discussed and focused on Wind power using TX as the model because TX is the largest RE energy producer in the world. So large you can add up all other states production and they still come in second place. However most of the possible Wind Energy is just turned off because there is no demand for it or put another way any place to send it too. So they turn it off aka curtailment as a code word.
The model is based on using batteries that do not exist to store that excess energy when there is no place for it to go and be stored to be used during peak demand times. Keep in mind al that wind energy is in the TX high plains hundreds of miles from where it is used in DFW. Commercial wind and solar is only feasible in very small geographic area located a considerable distance from population densities.
What it boils down to is wind is economically possible to supplement the grid in certain areas of the country if a battery existed to store the energy. Solar no matter where located or what battery exist is not feasible or usable. A solar panel in AZ has an EROI of 3 to 5. That same solar panel in TX is on the order of 2 to 4, in yankee country less than 1, in the Pacific Northwest is a joke of less than 1. You cannot apply an EROI for solar in AZ to the world. Solar and Wind are geographically limited and Wind has the largest area, solar is on a very small area where it can be used in places no one wants to live.
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