Posted By docjenser on 01 Apr 2016 12:23 PM
A couple things to consider:
1) There is price to using the grid as a needed buffer. Without the storage problem solved, the costs per KW will go up with the need to have the backup capacity ready. People are paying over 30 cents/kwh in Germany.
2) The Saudis caused the current oil price with a snip of a finger, initiated and supported by the US. They have the financial reserves to hold out longer, and the lowest production costs world wide. It is easy for them to get us back to $100/bbl, but they do not want to right now.
3) This is an aircraft carrier, it does not turn around on a dime. When they (and the UAE, and other gulf countries) decide to reduce production, a lack of infrastructure investment in the last couple years will create a supply problem. Lets see where oil prices are then. Fact is that the world uses more oil than ever before, and a record number of drill rigs parked at idle. Current wells are diminishing capacity, and new once are not drilled. Taking 10% of the oil off the market will double to quadruple prices soon.
Germany was paying high power rates BEFORE the massive build out of renewables. Renewables are stabilizing their rates, not driving them up (even though they arguably paid way too much for solar under their original feed-in-tariff structures.) The high subsidy costs of German nukes was put onto the taxpayers more than the ratepayers, but the decision to retire the nukes early has been a bit of a cost driver more recently as decommissioning costs come due sooner. German investment in efficiency driven in part by high electric rates is paying off in falling rates due to falling demand, even during econonomic expansion.
http://energytransition.de/2015/02/what-electricity-really-costs/
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-08-25/why-do-germany-s-electricity-prices-keep-falling-
The amount of storage needed to run the US with 100% PV is high, but that's never been a realistic scenario. The amount of storage needed in the US to keep the regional grids stable is much less than in Europe due to the large scale grid geography and already built out grid infrastructure, though there are cases to be made for new transmission lines to bring more cheap midwestern wind into the southeastern US & elsewhere. ( http://www.utilitydive.com/news/how-doe-is-leveraging-federal-authority-to-ease-transmission-development/416724/ ) Multiple simulations done by multiple parties using weather data over recent decades have shown that an all-renewables PJM region actually takes LESS grid storage to pull off (practically none) compared to a 75% renewables scenario. But now that demand response is allowed bid into the wholesale power markets the amount of grid storage necessary is much lower than any of the prior simulations of a predominantly wind & solar PJM grid. A smart water heater or smart car-charger is a lot cheaper for the ratepayers than a utility owned & operated grid battery.
The Saudis are actively seeking buyers for their oil business to establish a sovereign wealth fund rather than continuing to bank on an all-oil future. They are (wisely)starting to get out of that business:
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/apr/01/saudi-arabia-plans-to-sell-state-oil-assets-to-create-2tn-wealth-fund
They DO have to rein in their budgets, but the notion that their plan is to simply re-ratchet up to $100/bbl oil again has some holes in it. They seem more keen on becoming a world class financial center than staying in the oil business. Once they're out of the biz it'll depend on how the deal was structured whether and how much the Saudi state benefits or is hurt by high oil prices. They are diversifying.