By installing several gigawatt-hours of battery capacity.
...which requires several giga-tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions to manufacture, and which extends solar electricity availability "into the evening", which is not quite "until the next morning".
Not an attack, just a question.
How many giga-tons of carbon dioxide emissions to build a nuclear power plant?
According to
this paper:
The results show that the total emissions resulting from vegetation loss, equipment manufacturing and labor input during construction and operation are 1232.91 Gg CO2 with a carbon intensity of 1.31 g CO2/kWh
...
The average carbon emissions at the front end, construction and operation and the back end were 11.45, 7.82 and 3.07 g CO2/kWh, respectively.
1232.91 Giga-grams (Gg) is 0.00123291 Giga-Tonnes; If that's equivalent to 1.31g.CO
2/kWh, and construction of the plant contributes 11.45g.CO
2/kWh, then that gives a construction emissions total of about 0.0107 Giga-Tonnes.
The important measure for comparing power systems is the g.CO
2/kWh. How much carbon dioxide is produced
per unit of energy supplied to end users? For the Nuclear plant in the study quoted above, that figure is 11.45+7.82+3.07=22.34g.CO
2/kWh.
This figure must, to be useful, include all emmissions, from the whole system; If you are looking at Solar power, for example, you need to include emissions from panel manufacturing and eventual disposal; From transporting the panels from factory to installation site; From manufacturing of any inverters and transformers required; And from whatever system you use to obtain power when it is needed but the sun isn't shining - in this case, the batteries.
It's that last one that often gets ignored (and it applies to any generation technology - even nuclear plants don't have a 100% availability, so we must include emissions from whatever we use to generate electricity when the plant is not running; But it's generally only
significant for intermittent generation, ie Wind and Solar); In my home state, the last one is coal fired power plants, which make the system emissions FAR higher than the solar advicates want to admit. Batteries
might be less awful, but that's very difficult to determine, not least because batteries practically don't exist at the scale of national power grids - they are an utterly minuscule contributor to generation balancing, almost all of which is still done by pumped-storage Hydro.
A hundred nuclear plants produce about a Giga-Tonne of carbon dioxide in their construction; But it makes in the order of a million kWh (1GWh) for every hour of operation, and can operate for sixty years at 90-95% availability. A million kWh of battery storage is an astonishingly large amount of batteries; And they will need replacing several times in sixty years.
Lithium ion batteries generate about 2 tonnes of CO
2 per kWh in their manufacture; A gigatonne of carbon dioxide would "buy" you about 500GWh of storage (you still need generation!), and maybe last ten years; 100 nuclear plants get you about 500GWh of electricity
every five hours for
sixty years, from the same tonnage of emissions.
At the end of the day (or more importantly, the year), all that matters is the total systemwide g.CO
2/kWh. We need to cut that, sharply and rapidly.
Here's Europe in 2023:
We need to all do what the countries mostly showing in green (like Sweden, Norway and France) are doing, and to avoid doing what the countries mostly showing in brown (like Poland, Germany, and Italy) are doing.
Based on the goal of reducing carbon emissions overall and system wide, two conclusions are obvious:
What we need to do more of is Hydro, Geothermal, and Nuclear.
What we need to do less of is Coal, Gas, and Intermittent Renewables.
But that's only if we care more about actual outcomes, and not so much about feeling as though we are "in touch with nature".