E – 1897 Can wind and solar replace coal in Texas?
$25.00
Courses Included
In this online engineering PDH course, a study is presented showing a cost effective way of replacing coal generation in Texas by using only currently planned wind and solar energy generation projects. The key is to site the projects to take advantage of the complementary timing of solar and wind in the state—in the west, sunshine peaks midday while wind peaks overnight; near the coast, wind peaks on summer evenings. The study shows that not all of the currently planned projects would be needed; a subset of projects sited through complementary timing would be sufficient to replace most coal generation in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas system, leaving ten percent of coal power output to be covered by natural gas and nuclear power.
This course is intended for engineers concerned with the design and implementation of wind and solar energy systems.
This course is based on the Original Research Article, “Can wind and solar replace coal in Texas?” by Richard Morse, Sarah Salvatore, Joanna H. Slusarewicz, and Daniel S. Cohan published in Renewables: Wind, Water, and Solar (2022) 9:1, and made available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.