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Ultimately the need is for average prices around the $85 / MWh (8.5 cents / kWh) mark or less if we're to be internationally competitive. That's for bulk electricity not including distribution costs.It's obviously a hedge against spot market price spikes. So selling for anything north of $2 doesn't seem to 'financially difficult'.
So if we're to average 8.5 cents then there simply can't be too much at 200 cents without blowing the budget.
I mention it simply because economics is the big problem with all this. Finding things that work technically is relatively straightforward.
Finding things that can be built, with a highly paid workforce in a country with all sorts of environmental and safety standards, and which still achieve a lower absolute $ cost than that being done in the likes of China, the Middle East, South Africa or Brazil is much more difficult. Not impossible but it requires a rather firm approach to efficiency.
The US at least has massive scale on its side which helps there.
Europe of course can't do it but they're paying a price for that which isn't pleasant economically.