Print Email Facebook Twitter Competitiveness of Renewable Energy Title Competitiveness of Renewable Energy: An empirical study examining the relative cost of energy generation to determine the competitiveness of renewable technologies within the German electricity market. Author Hvalbye, Ole (TU Delft Electrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Science) Contributor Schröder, Enno (mentor) van Beers, Cees (graduation committee) Asghari, Hadi (graduation committee) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Date 2019-06-28 Abstract This thesis examines the competitiveness of renewable energy technology compared to conventional power generation methods by examining the relative cost of solar PV, wind, and coal. The findings of this analysis seek to answer the primary hypothesis: The unique application of Levelized Cost of Electricity (LCOE), entailing the manipulation of CAPEX and CO2 variables, reveals the points in time and the exact LCOE values where it becomes cost competitiveness to switch from a coal asset to a renewable asset within the context of the German electricity market. The results illustrate that cost competitiveness between new renewables (solar PV, onshore wind, and offshore wind) and coal in the German electricity market does cross at certain points. The research seeks to determine the precise scenarios under which new renewable plants are more cost competitive than existing coal plants. The LCOE calculation has been chosen as the methodology to estimate the relative cost competitiveness of these differing power generation methods, under predefined scenarios for both CAPEX-reduction for renewables and CO2-price increase for coal. New assets are compared to existing assets; therefore, LCOE has been chosen in order to compare operational costs (OPEX) plus the capital cost (CAPEX) of new assets, with only the operational cost (OPEX) for existing assets. i.e. the investment cost for coal-fired assets is denoted as a sunk cost. This allowed for the development of a simplified framework to analyze an electricity-producing firm involved in an investment decision, whether a new solar or wind project or the continuation of an existing coal power plant... Subject CostRenewable EnergyLCOEEnergy MarketCoalCO2 taxation To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:118b6dd1-6286-49f6-b47f-a3241ccb978f Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2019 Ole Hvalbye Files PDF Competitiveness_of_Renewa ... Energy.pdf 3.29 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:118b6dd1-6286-49f6-b47f-a3241ccb978f/datastream/OBJ/view