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Take a look at this study: https://www.ise.fraunhofer.de/content/dam/ise/de/documents/p...

Germany will require 100-150 GW capacity which cost about 1000 EUR/kW and would require an investment of 100+B EUR.

Electricity prices already skyrocketed in Germany and no end in sight.

Listen: I invested in PV, in low energy houses, in heat pumps - but the PV/wind strategy doesn’t work the way people would like them to in their ideology and Germany has proven that.



I think I'm more or less agreeing with you. You've got to build the gas plants (or something), for the dark and windless days of winter, right? That's going to be expensive, but PV/wind won't solve it, so you have to build it.

Now that you've built those plants, would you rather pay to operate them year round, or only when needed?

PV/wind won't help you reduce capex for winter, but it should reduce opex on gas. And that's something.

Spending capex on interconnections may reduce the total dispatchable capacity needed; if it's done carefully. Having more time zones in one grid helps because peaks correspond with time of day; having more latitude helps because day lengths and cloud cover varies. Having more of both helps because still air tends to be geographically bounded. But long distance transmission is expensive.


I’d rather build nuclear plants and not keep them entirely idle but forego the investment into additional PV and wind. Don’t get me wrong: when the sun shines and the wind blows we cover 100% of our need essentially. That’s great. But we can stop now. Because we produce too much on some days and put our grid at risk and we produce too little to often on others and put our grid at risk




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