https://cleantechnica.com/2015/04/13/so ... er-prices/

Keep in mind these are unsubsidized prices, and it's also ignoring other generation systems' costs and consequences to human health and the environment (smog, air pollution, more asthma, oil spills, aquifer contamination, toxic waste leaks, geopolitical dependence on unstable parts of the world, etc). The town I live in gets 100% of its water from an aquifer that fossil fuel companies want to frack over. That just seems like a terrible, horrible, no-good-very-bad idea to me, and it doesn't seem like this should be political at all. Aquifers have been contaminated by oil and gas exploration before:
https://www.epa.gov/hfstudy
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-e ... TL20111208
http://www.desmogblog.com/2014/10/07/ce ... wastewater
These are all probably good reasons why new electric generation was 69% renewable in 2015 and 99% in 2016!.
It's interesting how mainstream this stuff is getting. Just yesterday I was walking my dog and struck up a conversation with a neighbor. Turns out he's a Jim Rickards fan and worries about some kind of IMF-led monetary collapse on January 1st 2017. He's stocking up on food, water, gold, and guns. He showed me his garage, where has has 4 KW of solar panels ready to mount as well as a huge battery backup system. If the friendly suburban neighborhood survivalist is going solar, it's mainstream.

It's all going critical mass. You can now get a rooftop solar array installed for $3 a watt, often much less with subsidies. I'm strongly considering making a career change and going into this field.