Energy Industry Domino Effect
The energy industry is prone to frequent unexpected events
that change its entire structure. Domino effects
magnify and spread the effects of events. A chain
reaction occurs when a small change causes a similar change
nearby, a pattern that repeats leading to large scale
changes, much like one falling domino triggering the fall of
an entire room full of edge balanced dominoes. Middle East
political changes could not have been predicted to the
extent of change seen in the last few weeks. There will be
more change in the Middle East, no longer will dictatorships
and rule by force be sustainable possibly due to small
amounts of energy used by tweets and Facebook users. The
financial ramifications in the Middle East have been seen in
recent increases in the price of oil. The domino failures of
the Deepwater Horizon oil well disaster will make oil more
expensive and harder to reach. The nuclear fear, whether
justified or not, will change energy policy in Japan and
elsewhere.
We have experienced events recently which will compound to
help change our energy future towards converting solar
energy into electricity and, more specifically,
photovoltaics (PV).
For example, the California Energy Crisis of 2001 helped
spark investments in system level solar electric solutions
at the California Energy Commission under the Public
Interest Energy Research Department. These vertically
integrated system solutions projects were recognized by the
US Department of Energy (DOE) as a good use of public funds
when they replicated the concept across the country in the
Solar America Initiative. The DOE continues this system
level approach with the
SunShot Initiative, the most recent program to further
reduce the cost of electricity from solar. As these system
costs continue to fall, conventional costs will continue to
rise.
Oil will be needed to support Japan after the recent
earthquake disaster. Russia has promise energy industry
support to Japan, the easiest of which to implement is fuel.
Clean up is going to take lots of horsepower from fuel.
The Japanese electrical grid will be without electricity
from nuclear generators for quite sometime. Bloomberg
reported that Tokyo Electric is still seeking government
approvals for a full restart of the Kashiwazaki Kariwa
nuclear power plant (five reactors at 1,067 MW and two at
1,315 MW for a total 7,965 MW), which was shutdown after
being damaged by an earthquake in 2007. The company posted
its first loss in 28 years after it was forced to buy fossil
fuels at record prices to make up for the lost nuclear
output.
Licensing
California will need to revisit its approach to re-licensing
nuclear plants after the Fukushima nuclear accident. Imagine
evacuating the area around the San Onofre California nuclear
energy plant (two reactors, at 1,172 MW and 1,178 MW,
completed in 1983 and 1984 respectively), with the
prevailing but constantly changing winds blowing inland
towards Orange County and Los Angeles just 70 miles away.
Nuclear licensing will be revisited for Diablo Canyon
Nuclear Power Plant, which is owned by
Pacific Gas & Electric (PCG), aka PG&E. It is not in as
populated an area as the San Onofre nuclear plant, but San
Luis Obispo California is very close to Diablo Canyon.
The maximum output of this power plant is 2,240 MW.
The Diablo Canyon plant was recently re-commissioned with
new steam generators after 25 years of operating. Somewhat
alarmingly after considering the recent Japanese earthquake,
a January 2011 PG&E report outlines a previously unknown
potential volcanic fault located 1 km off shore of the
Diablo Canyon Power Plant. Recent licensing procedures
are investigating extending the life expectance of the
Diablo Canyon nuclear plant. An Unusual Event was declared
at 1:23 AM PT on Friday March 11 at Diablo Canyon,
apparently in response to tsunami warnings. Again,
representing energy industry domino effects from events
thousands of miles away.
We now know that our assumption that a 9.0
Richter scale earthquake could not happen is false. And
the dominoes falling because of that earthquake (Tsunami,
power outages, backup systems failures), demonstrate the
fragility of our energy systems.
Oil and Solar
Previous high oil prices created the first bubble of
solar stocks in the summer of 2008.
Sunpower (SPWRA) reached its highs in December of 2007
and
First Solar (FSLR) briefly topped above $300 around the
same time that oil was peaking. Over the past month, that
trend has been inverted, with oil rising as solar stocks
have fallen. I'm not predicting another solar bubble, but I
expect solar stocks will see a steady rise for well
executing companies.
M&A activity will continue with
Evergreen Solar (ESLR) a prime candidate. They have a
good brand, unique approach to utilization of silicon
without cutting with saws and the associated losses. The
market cap of Evergreen with their associated MW/year
capacities makes it a nice acquisition when including their
intellectual property at current low share prices.
A sad but interesting visual during the tsunami news
coverage in Japan was seeing a house float by that had PV
modules across what was once the south facing roof. While
this specific building had obviously experienced a disaster,
the energy supply from the PV being distributed did not
cause a societal disaster.
Rising oil prices and increased attention towards the risks
of nuclear energy in the ring of fire will increase
alternatives to conventional energy production.
As our mistaken assumptions about the security and
sustainability of traditional energy sources fall like
dominoes, alternative energy businesses become more and more
attractive.
This article was originally published on
altenergystocks.com and was reprinted with permission.
DISCLAIMER: Long OIL and FSLR.
Joseph McCabe is a solar industry expert with over 20
years in the business. He is an American Solar Energy
Society Fellow, a Professional Engineer, and is
internationally recognized as an expert in thin film PV,
BIPV and Photovoltaic/Thermal solar industry activities.
McCabe has a Masters Degree in Nuclear and Energy
Engineering. Joe is a Contributing Editor to Alt Energy
Stocks and can be reached at energy [no space] ideas at
gmail dotcom.