Two minor footnotes: First, this was framed as a "centralised versus decentralised" debate. There are of course many variations on the decentralisation theme. (Do you really mean distributed generation, rather than transmission? Does this include microgrids? Etc.) Given the way the questions were asked, I simply took it to mean the absence of a centralised electricity grid. Second, when I talk about first-best and second-best alternatives, I don't quite mean in the strict economic sense of optimality conditions. Rather, I am trying to convey the idea that one solution is only really better when the other is unavailable due to outside factors.
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Why are grids still vital? Why is a functioning electricity grid necessary for economic growth?
These
two questions are more or less the same, so I‘ll take them together. Large,
centralised grids constitute the most efficient and cost-effective way of delivering
(and consuming) electricity in modern economies. Not only are decentralised
options substantially more expensive and (generally) less
reliable,
there’s no intrinsic reason to believe that they will be better at delivering a clean energy future.
Is the
centralised argument being lost in places like SA where the grid is so poor and
not being improved?
I
wouldn't say that South Africa’s present electricity woes are the result of
grid failure. Rather, the problem is primarily one of generation capacity and
government mismanagement. On that note, the grid is the one component of the
electricity system that is best thought of as a “natural
monopoly”.
(The other components of the electricity value chain – i.e. generation and
distribution – should then be left to competitive forces.) Your question
highlights an irony. Eskom’s mismanagement on the generation side (huge
overspends and delays on the Medupi and Kusile power stations, etc.) are
undermining confidence in its ability to manage a centralised grid, the one
aspect that government can legitimately claim needs to be operated as a
regulated monopoly.
That
all being said, Eskom is falling behind the required investment
goals for maintaining an adequate grid infrastructure into the future. A
deficient grid network has also constrained economic growth in many other
developing countries, from Nigeria to India. And, yet, this is not to say that
the decentralised alternative offers an intrinsically superior solution. A grid
system remains the first-best option. Decentralised solutions are really a
second-best option in the absence of the former. The distinction is crucial.
What role
for de-centralised solutions?
I
think that decentralised solutions will remain a second-best, niche alternative
for the next few decades. There are several things that cause me to take this
position, of which intermittency and local storage are probably the most
pronounced. Now, there do happen to be a number of exciting developments on the
storage issue, but nothing that I would expect to fundamentally change the
equation. More to the point, I believe that the resilience of a decentralised generation
system will fundamentally require a functioning grid. The increased
intermittency and smaller scale of decentralised power production will
necessitate excellent access to similar, small-scale generation in other
regions. This can only be achieved through a robust grid network. (An example
may help to make my point: Germany’s much-fĂȘted Energiewende was
supposed to involve a fundamental shift towards the decentralised paradigm.
What we've seen in practice, however, is that the Germans are investing hugely in extending their inter-regional grid capacities to places like Norway, whose
hydropower resources offer the most cost-effective means of accommodating the intermittency of wind and solar.) Similarly, the parallels
that people inevitably draw between a dentralised electricity system and the
communication sector (i.e. where fixed-line telephones were leap-frogged by
cell phones) are misplaced. Beyond various other differences, cell phones networks are
fundamentally centralised in nature: Cell phone towers are the grid equivalent
of the modern-day communications sector.