Solar Power Generates Electricity Approximately 25-30% of the Time, While Onshore and Offshore Wind Produce Power Up to 35% and 55% of the Time, Respectively
Battery storage is necessary to store energy that can be dispatched when renewables are not generating power, though they can’t affordably or technologically be deployed on a mass scale necessary to meet our nation’s complex energy needs. Even the best batteries only provide up to 8 hours of backup electricity.
A 2023 report from McKinsey concludes that “in the coming decades, a fully ‘dispatchable’ backup energy supply will be required to ensure the reliability of the power grid for multiday swings. In the absence of breakthroughs in long-duration energy storage, natural gas—which can be implemented at scale—could be the cheapest and lowest-carbon candidate for this role.”
Natural gas generated electricity is reliable, clean, and flexible – able to be dispatched at scale in minutes to address power shortages, regardless of the weather.