From the original article from the first post:
For example, on the installation's 20th anniversary in 2012, the panels still cranked out 91.7 percent of their rated output.
The key part is
rated. What is the rated power of a solar panel?
It's the power output of a solar panel given for 1000W/m2.
The problem with that is, that's a very generous, idealistic condition.
I studied automation at university, the part of the course was automation and control system for renewables.
For the overwhelming majority of the time, the solar irradiation is around 500W/m2. The ratings and data for ~1000W/m2 is fairly irrelevant as those conditions are very rare for most of locations.
I do recall from the lectures, a certain graph, PV efficiency over lifespan for
different solar irradiation levels.
So including that 500W/m2 irrdation. While the efficiency loss for 1000W/m2 was fairly low, at maybe several percent (relative to original) over 10 years, the drop for 500W/m2 was far greater, at 30-35% iirc.
I was trying to find those studies, but for some damn reason, all the studies are for 1000W/m2, never mentioning lower solar irradiationlevels.
Unfortunately, those lecture materials were never provided to us, can't pinpoint any track of it, maybe if I was to visit the university again, I would be able to contact the professor that gave those lectures.
If anyone knows or has found such studies, I will be happy to read.
Then there's also storage, for the grid-level, each person can do their own math.
Calculate say diesel fuel sales to electric needs in transportation, propane needs to electric needs (you can use heat pumps "300% efficient" in the calculations) and then arrive at a final result, how much more power generation does the grid needs to replace all of those current fuels that are burned on-site to get heat or other things done?
For diesel alone I arrived at 60-80% ballpark increase in the electricity production to replace just the diesel fuel sales (I used very ungenerous numbers for the diesel vehicles too, heating oil sales not included).
Ballpark wise, not going to work out.
That's energy, not power. Storage will not fix this part of the equation. You need more production AND even more storage to keep the increasing peaks at bay now.