Solar v/s Oil-fired power plant

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Solar v/s Oil-fired power plant

by pareekbharat86 » Wed Nov 13, 2013 8:38 am
Technological improvements and reduced equipment costs have made converting solar energy directly into electricity far more cost-efficient in the last decade. However, the threshold of economic viability for solar power (that is, the price per barrel to which oil would have to rise in order for new solar power plants to be more economical than new oil-fired power plants) is unchanged at thirty-five dollars.
Which of the following, if true, does most to help explain why the increased cost-efficiency of solar power has not decreased its threshold of economic viability?
(A) The cost of oil has fallen dramatically.
(B) The reduction in the cost of solar-power equipment has occurred despite increased raw material costs for that equipment.
(C) Technological changes have increased the efficiency of oil-fired power plants.
(D) Most electricity is generated by coal-fired or nuclear, rather than oil-tired, power plants.
(E) When the price of oil increases, reserves of oil not previously worth exploiting become economically viable.

OA is C

I was tempted to choose C too. But, just then I read the sentence in brackets. It says that the "price per barrel to which....oil fired power plants".

I would deal with such kind of a problem in the following way- For solar power plants to be more viable, their price of generation of power per mega-watt-hour should be lower than the price of oil per mega-watt-hour of power generated by an oil-fired plant. That would prove efficiency as a result of technological changes that C talks about. However, I repeat the stimulus says 'price of oil per barrel'.

Let me take hypothetical figures to explain my rationale. Suppose price per unit of power from a solar plant is 1USD. Price of oil is 5USD a barrel and it requires 0.2 barrels for one unit of power . Therefore the price of power from an oil-fired station would also be 1USD. An investor would be indifferent in either case. Tomorrow oil price increases to 10USD/barrel. Of course, the oil-fired plants will become less viable. Technology has not changed. Only the price of oil has changed.

I repeat again, I would have gone with C had the stimulus mentioned price of oil per mega-watt-hour of power.

Please guide.
Thanks,
Bharat.
Source: — Critical Reasoning |

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by [email protected] » Wed Nov 13, 2013 10:29 pm
Hi Bharat,

You stated that you would have chosen the correct answer, but didn't. I'm curious about which answer you DID choose. Which of the remaining 4 options did you think was relevant to the prompt?

For this CR questions, we're asked to find an answer that EXPLAINS the given situation.

We're told:
1) NEW solar power plants are cheaper (due to tech improvements and reduced equipment costs) and converting solar energy into electricity is far more cost-efficient than before.
2) The threshold to choose NEW solar power PLANTS instead of NEW oil-fired PLANTS is UNCHANGED (the 35 dollars isn't really relevant; it's the same as it was before).

So, we need an answer that accounts for the fact that new solar power PLANTS are cheaper than ever before BUT new solar power isn't any more economically viable than before... In other words, how can the threshold stay the same if it's now cheaper to produce solar power???

As a prediction, the only thing that I can think of is that it's now somehow cheaper to produce oil-fired PLANTS TOO.

Which answer states that? Only C

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by dominhtri1995 » Thu Nov 14, 2013 3:20 am
Hi Rich,

Can u explain what are they talking about in the bracket ( That is, the price ....)

Thanks

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by pareekbharat86 » Fri Nov 15, 2013 8:11 pm
[email protected] wrote:Hi Bharat,

You stated that you would have chosen the correct answer, but didn't. I'm curious about which answer you DID choose. Which of the remaining 4 options did you think was relevant to the prompt?

For this CR questions, we're asked to find an answer that EXPLAINS the given situation.

We're told:
1) NEW solar power plants are cheaper (due to tech improvements and reduced equipment costs) and converting solar energy into electricity is far more cost-efficient than before.
2) The threshold to choose NEW solar power PLANTS instead of NEW oil-fired PLANTS is UNCHANGED (the 35 dollars isn't really relevant; it's the same as it was before).

So, we need an answer that accounts for the fact that new solar power PLANTS are cheaper than ever before BUT new solar power isn't any more economically viable than before... In other words, how can the threshold stay the same if it's now cheaper to produce solar power???

As a prediction, the only thing that I can think of is that it's now somehow cheaper to produce oil-fired PLANTS TOO.

Which answer states that? Only C

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
I was mentioning A as a possible answer.
Thanks,
Bharat.