How much Solar energy would we need to install to meet all of our energy needs? Solar does not have to meet all of our needs to make a meaningful impact, but it would be interesting to see what it would look like if it did.

There are a few simple calculations we can run to get a rough idea.

For the first two examples, we'll use the chart below from the NREL. It shows the Solar Resource for each region of the United States by kWh/m2/day. We'll use 6.0 kWh/m2/day for our calculations.

For the third examples, we'll use real kWh production numbers from Utility-Scale Solar (I could not find actual kWh generation numbers for Residential.).

Photovoltaic Solar Resource of the United States [1]

Example 1: Total Annual Electricity Production

6 kWh/m2/day * 365 days = 2,190 kWh/m2/year

Solar PV will capture 15% of that annual 2,190 kWh resource.

.15 * 2,190 kWh/m2/year = 328.5 kWh/m2/year

Total Annual U.S. Electricity Generation: 4,092,935,000,000 kWh [2]

4,092,935,000,000 / 328.5 = 12,459,467,275 m2

12,459,467,275 m2 = 12,459.5 km2


Example 2: Total Annual Energy Consumption

6 kWh/m2/day * 365 days = 2,190 kWh/m2/year

Solar PV will capture 15% of that annual 2,190 kWh resource.

.15 * 2,190 kWh/m2/year = 328.5 kWh/m2/year

Total Annual U.S. Energy Consumption: 98.46 Quadrillion Btu [3]

98.46 Quadrillion Btu = 28,855,777,569,157 kWh

28,855,777,569,157 / 328.5 = 87,841,027,607 m2

87,841,027,607 m2 = 87,841 km2


The above examples have some assumptions. We are assuming the Solar Resource data is accurate. We are assuming the 15% efficiency rate. We are assuming the PV panels are laid back-to-back over thousands of square km's when in fact there would be space between them.

We have the actual kWh electricity generation numbers and actual square km information from some of the top Solar Utility-Scale installations in the U.S. (Note: These numbers are from the Wikipedia section for each Plant, so numbers may not be precise.):

Top Utility-Scale Solar Installations in the U.S.[4]
PV T T T T T
Plant Tech Capacity Generation (MWh)/Year Area (km2) Location
Solar Star I PV 579 MW 896,830 13 Rosamond, CA
Solar Star II T T 809,157 T T
Desert Sunlight I CdTe 550 MW 766,381 16 Riverside, CA
Desert Sunlight II T T 699,881 T T
Desert Sunlight III T T 1,466,262 T T
Topaz CdTe 550 MW 1,053,373 25 San Luis Obispo, CA
CA Valley Solar Ranch PV 250 MW 684,403 8 San Luis Obispo, CA
Agua Caliente CdTe 250 MW 741,181 10 Yuma, AZ
Antelope Valley Solar PV 266 MW 623,000 8.5 Lancaster, CA
Mesquite Solar 1 PV 150 MW 350,000 3.6 Arlington, AZ
Copper Mtn I PV 458 MW 100,000 5.7 Boulder City, CA
Copper Mtn II T T 224,986 T T
Copper Mtn III T T 400,000 T T
Campo Verde CdTe 139 MW 371,297 5.7 Imperial County, CA
Centinela ? 170 MW 550,000 8.4 El Centro, CA
Solar Thermal (CSP) T T T T T
Plant Tech Capacity Generation (MWh)/Year Area (km2) Location
Ivanpah CSP (Tower) 377 MW 500,000 16 East Mojave Desert
SEGS CSP (Trough) 394 MW 662,000 6.5 Mojave Desert
Mojave CSP (Trough) 280 MW 617,000 7 Mojave Desert
Solana CSP (Trough) 280 MW 944,000 7.8 Gila Bend, AZ
Genesis CSP (Trough) 280 MW 580,000 7.8 Mojave Desert
Martin CSP (Trough) 75 MW 155,000 2 Indianatown, FL
Nevada One CSP (Trough) 75 MW 136,000 1.6 Boulder City, NV

Top Utility-Scale PV Averages
Plant Generation (MWh)/Year Area (km2)
Solar Star 1,705,987 13
Desert Sunlight 2,932,524 16
Topaz 1,053,373 25
CA Valley Solar Ranch 684,403 8
Agua Caliente 741,181 10
Antelope Valley Solar 623,000 8.5
Mesquite Solar 1 350,000 3.6
Copper Mtn 724,986 5.7
Campo Verde 371,297 5.7
Centinela 550,000 8.4
Total: 9,736,751 103.9
Average: 973,675 10.39

The average Utility-Scale PV plant is producing 1,000,000 MWh/year, or 1,000,000,000 kWh, in about a 10 km2 footprint.

Example 3: Total Annual Energy Consumption - All Utility-Scale PV

Total U.S. Energy Consumption: 28,855,777,569,157 kWh/Year.

Average Utility-Scale Solar plant produces 1,000,000,000 kWh/Year.

28,855,777,569,157 / 1,000,000,000 = 28,856

We would need roughly 29,000 Utility-Scale Solar plants to meet our total energy needs.

The average Utility-Scale Solar plant is 10 km2.

28,856 * 10 km2 = 288,560 km2


To get some perspective on the size of our 3 Examples, let's look at two recognizable features of the United States:  California (423,971 km2) and The Great Lakes (244,160 km2). [5]

Example 1 -Total Annual Electricity Production: 2.9% of California or a little smaller than Lake Ontario (18,960 km2).

Example 2 -Total Annual Energy Consumption: 20.7% of California or a little larger than Lake Superior (82,100 km2).

Example 3 -Total Annual Energy Consumption - All Utility-Scale PV: 68% of California or all of The Great Lakes (244,160 km2) + a 2nd Lake Michigan.

The Great Lakes Map

Some might say, no problem, we can spread Solar installations the size of The Great Lakes around the United States.

Let's take a closer look.

Most experts say the best place for large-scale Solar development is the SW United States.

We can perform a simple visual experiment. Stare at the blue Great Lakes in the chart above for 5 seconds. Then move this mental image over to the area on the map of Southern California, Southern Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. Are we really prepared to install solar panels across this entire region?

The question is do we really have the space? When you look at a map, it looks easy, but when you consider what already exists on the ground, space is actually limited. We have a big discrepancy in the km2 numbers between Example 2 and Example 3, but even installing Solar plants equivalent to 20% the size of California is not realistic.

Let's look at another example.

The Great Lakes Map [6]

As we've seen CA is 423,971 km2. However, roughly half of this land is off limits.

Water: 20,031 km2

Sierra Nevada: 63,118 km2

Agriculture: 103,600 km2

Urban: 12,950 km2

Total: 199,699 km2

The picture below of the California Valley Solar Ranch in San Luis Obispo, CA gives us a feel for the size of a typical PV Plant.

PV Plant

Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico do have a lot wide-open space. However, much of this land contains mountains and beautiful valleys in between those mountains. Do we want to fill in the space with Solar plants?

It is not just the question of space. We'd need to build a lot of Utility-Scale Solar plants . . . . 29,000 of them.

To put it in perspective, here are the numbers for the existing power plants that provide for most of our energy needs today: [7]

Natural Gas: 1,725

Coal: 518

Nuclear: 63

Hydroelectric: 1,435

Petroleum: 1,101

Other Renewable: 2,299

Rooftop Solar

Today Solar is divided about 50 / 50 between Rooftop Solar and Utility-Scale Solar.

In Examples 2 and 3, we assumed we were using all Utility-Scale to meet our energy needs. In reality, we'd probably have some percentage as Rooftop and some percentage as Utility-Scale. It would likely be a higher % of Utility-Scale in order to scale faster. I searched for total Rooftop Resource, but I was unable to get the figures. If I can in the future, I will update this section.

It is also true that Solar does not have to account for all of our energy needs to have a meaningful impact. However, if Solar can not provide for our energy needs, we'll have to fill the void with other sources, and today most of those sources emit CO2.

In summary, it would be possible to install enough Solar energy to meet all of our energy needs, but it is going to consume more land than I believe any of us have really considered, and at the end of the day, more land than most of us will be willing to lose (especially environmentalists who have thankfully fought to preserve the limited remaining open space).

Enough of my predictions, next we'll take a look at the official predictions.

Next: U.S. Department of Energy Predicitons >

References

  1. NREL Photovoltaic Solar Resource of the United States
  2. EIA Monthly, Table 7.2a (Electricity Production)
  3. EIA Monthly, Table 1.3 (Primary Consumption)
  4. Wikipedia (search by Plant name)
  5. U.S. EPA, Great Lakes, Physical Facts
  6. California Farmland Conversion Report 2008 - 2010
  7. EIA Frequently Asked Questions EIA Table 4.1 Count of Electric Power Industry Power Plants