What will power the grid in 2035? The race is wide open
For many, natural gas is the easy answer for 24/7, baseload power.
It’s tested, inexpensive, and widely available.
Those delays not only pose a risk to tech companies, but also to the natural gas industry itself.
, 40% of the natural gas consumed today goes toward generating electricity.
Nuclear threat SMR startups might have the best shot at displacing natural gas power plants.
Several SMR companies aim to have reactors up and running before the decade is over.
Kairos Power, which counts Google as a future customer, is one of them.
Others hope to follow a few years later.
Fusion’s timeline The other technology companies are warming to is fusion power.
Fusion startups are also targeting the early 2030s — or sooner — to deploy their first reactors.
But Helion may have the most aggressive timeline out of all of them.
If the startup can deliver power in those quantities, it would completely rewrite the energy market.
added 63 gigawatts of new generating capacity across all sources.
Fusion faces a similar scale-up challenge, though it faces even more unknowns.
Some experts predict one megawatt-hour from a fusion power plant could run about $150 initially.
But they might all be undercut by renewables paired with batteries.
The costs of wind and solar power have dropped precipitously over the last decade.
Newer designs aimed squarely at grid connections could slash prices further.
Because those new batteries eschew the use of critical minerals like lithium, cobalt, or nickel, they promise to dramatically reduce the cost of long-duration energy storage to the point where it’s hard to make a case for anything else
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