The Telegraph is going it's mile about the proposed plan to up solar to 36GW and to use countryside ground to do it.
It sounds really horrible, an area the size of one of our national parks.
So what is it really?
We generate around 47GW power max. So if we wanted to get 47gw of solar we'd need 512 square km of ground. That's a patch of ground some 22km on a side.
Horrible right?
How about if we decided to encourage 800 farms to give over some land, or put up a roofed building with solar panels on it as I have seen businesses doing in France local to us.
Well that would drop it a bit. Down to 28 meters a side. Doesn't seem too bad does it?? How many farms are there in southern England? 38,400. Now if we took only 4,000 of them, you would need a space 6m on a side.
I hate it when papers try to stamped the unexpecting public into knee jerk reactions by selling horror stories which are simply not true.
If we had a truly effective storage mechanism we could take down all the wind turbines and get rid of all the gas and do the whole lot on stored energy and generated hydrogen.
That's the real problem. Storage. Not power. The amount of energy that hits southern England, alone, on a summers day is just short of 20TW. Solar panel efficiency is around 18% so we that much land could recover some 4,000 GW of power. This is per second so each hour would be 4,000 TWH.
Of course this is not feasible. But it gives you an idea of just how much energy is hitting the ground and how we are simply ignoring it and burning fossil fuels instead.
Which is why storage is a really, really, hot potato right now.
But let us run horror stories about how our entire land is going to be covered in solar panels.
Only if we want to power the whole of Europe and half of the US too.