HT & Stereo System Fuel Shortage Coming According to Grid Operators


US Faces Electricity Shortages Heading Into Summer, as Grid Operators Warn of Limits of Green Energy

With more than 25 years of executive experience in the utility industry, people tend to listen when MISO CEO John Bear talks about energy.

And the message he’s sending about electricity shortages as Americans head into summer is clear.

“I am concerned about it,” Bear told The Wall Street Journal in an article exploring why power-grid operators are worried that electricity supplies may struggle to keep up with rising energy demands.

Bear is not some lone prophet foretelling doom.

From California to Texas to the Midwest, the Journal spoke to grid operators warning that conditions are ripe for outages, as plants pivot to new renewable energy sources.

These concerns are not unfounded. Evidence shows America’s power grid is increasingly unreliable and struggling to keep up with demand, and operators are bracing for rolling blackouts that could be arriving as soon as this year during heat waves and cold snaps.

Politicians and policy wonks often speak of “quitting” fossil fuels, as if they are a filthy habit or a narcotic like crack. But the reality is humans could not survive without coal, natural gas, and oil.

Despite their impressive growth, renewable energy sources—solar, wind, hydro and biomass combined—account for just 20 percent of US utility-scale electricity generation.

Fossil fuels, on the other hand, provide 61 percent of utility-scale electricity generation in the country. They heat and cool our homes, run our appliances, and feed the Teslas we drive.

While there is a great deal of excitement around the potential of renewable energy, one cannot simply replace a coal plant with a wind or solar farm and expect things will go just fine. These are intermittent energy sources, for one, but their construction and expansion has also been hit with delays for a variety of reasons, including inflation and supply chain bottlenecks.

“Every market around the world is trying to deal with the same issue,” Brad Jones, interim chief executive of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, told the Journal. “We’re all trying to find ways to utilize as much of our renewable resources as possible…and at the same time make sure that we have enough dispatchable generation to manage reliability.”

The shift from filthy coal to clean energy has not always been smooth.

Last year, for example, Hawaiian officials were stunned to learn the coal plant they had killed had been replaced with a massive battery powered by oil, which one public official described as “going from cigarettes to crack.

 
 

It’s true that fossil fuels come with tradeoffs. They can be messy and they emit greenhouse gasses. But the idea that “green” energies do not come with similar environmental tradeoffs is simply not true.

That electric car your neighbor just bought probably isn’t as green as he thinks. It takes tens of thousands of pounds of CO2 emissions to produce those fancy Tesla batteries, research shows.

Jason Hickel, an economic anthropologist, argues that renewable energy has the potential to be just as destructive to the environment as fossil fuels. While the phrase “clean energy” might conjure up images of beaming sunshine, rainbows, and gales of wind, the reality is far different.

Writing in Foreign Policy, Hickel noted the transition to renewable energy sources exacts a serious toll on the environment; it requires massive amounts of energy, not to mention the extraction of minerals and metals at great environmental and social costs.

A little-noticed World Bank study examined just the amount of material it would take to get to a “zero emission” economy.

“[The] results are staggering,” Hicekl noted, extrapolating using some basic arithmetic, “34 million metric tons of copper, 40 million tons of lead, 50 million tons of zinc, 162 million tons of aluminum, and no less than 4.8 billion tons of iron.”

It’s easy, of course, not to think about such matters, just like it’s easy to not think about the fact that there’s a good chance the lithium-ion battery powering your EV was made with cobalt mined by a child in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the vast majority of the world’s cobalt is mined.

These are unpleasant realities, but they are realities nevertheless, and they remind us of an important economic adage popularized by economist Thomas Sowell: there are no solutions, there are only trade offs. (In economics, this idea is sometimes expressed as opportunity cost. It’s the idea that you must sacrifice something to obtain a product or service or experience, even if it’s simply your time or attention.)

When it comes to fossil fuels, many Americans tend to ignore their benefits and focus on their costs. When it comes to green energy, however, many of the same people do the opposite; they focus on the benefits and ignore the costs.

To be fair, in some ways it’s easy to forget just how fortunate we are to have fossil fuels. They are provided to us on a daily basis through the invisible miracle of the market, which sees them provided in seemingly infinite amounts, often (though not always) at relatively little cost.

If John Bear’s concerns prove founded, however, Americans may soon get a rather rude reminder this summer about the importance of fossil fuels.

“As we move forward, we need to know that when you put a solar panel or a wind turbine up, it’s not the same as a thermal resource,” Bear told the Journal.

This is good advice. Let’s hope the right people hear it.

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Showing 9 responses by nonoise

Do you think we are up to the task right now with renewable energy? From my understanding the windmills froze and wouldn’t turn.

And there you have it, ladies and germs. The whole energy system wasn’t winterized, knowing it would break down, so they could use their surge pricing. It’s a feature in the system and not a bug. Remember that with surge pricing, the costs go up from around $25.70/megawatt hour to over $9,000/megawatt hour.

The greatest transfer of wealth in Texas history happened during the freeze, at the cost of people freezing to death. Even Texas energy officials admitted that the oil and gas lines freezing was the reason it all came down and not because of the limited amount of windmills they use. And yet, we have someone here not dealing in good faith.

Even now with the intense heat of summer upon us, they have solar power generating twice as much power as their system can handle. It could be 14% instead of 7% but their lines can’t handle the input from solar. Again, a feature and not a bug.

All the best,
Nonoise

 

In case you missed it, this is an attempt to turn an audio forum into a facebook posting with the OP blocking all negative responses. 

All the best,
Nonoise

Well, will you look at this: most of the negative responses to arty's political rant trying to masquerade as some serious discussion on energy have been removed. What is it with playing the victim card that people like him resort to so often?

All the best,
Nonoise

Good old jerry with his made up "facts" again. He'll never change no matter how upset he gets. As for the actual costs of Texas energy, here's an excerpt on the linked article:

As a result, Texans spent an exorbitant amount on electricity during a week in which most of them couldn’t get much electricity. For the entirety of 2020, Texans paid $9.8 billion to keep the juice flowing. On February 16 alone, they spent roughly $10.3 billion. Costs for the month of February totaled more than $50 billion. 

And this is from the Texas Monthly, which goes into great detail on the rip off scam that has been Ercot. And don't forget that back in the '70s the roles of Dems and Reps were largely reversed and it took awhile for the conservative Dems to turn color and become Republicans after LBJ enacted the Civil Rights Act. Preston Smith never supported a Democratic president after that. He just used the party position to further himself.

You see, back then, Ercot was just starting out and as with all things Texas, they want no Federal oversight over anything they do, which is why they won't join their electrical grid to the rest of the nation. I mean, how else can they rape their own citizens and get away with it?

All the best,
Nonoise

Keep dreaming, dude. It’s all you have. That, and using large fonts to scream at us with. Here’s a hint: it doesn’t help your cause any when you do that.

By the way, that report was from last year and we all got through it just fine, except Texas, who runs their own grid and rips off their citizens. All that's needed is a little moderation and increased use of alternative energy sources and, most importantly, combining all the grids into one big one that can draw off each other when needed.

All the best,
Nonoise

FEE dot org is rated as a right leaning organization with low confidence in their reporting so, of course, they'd say this. All one needs to do is google their bias ratings. 

As for the costs of charging an EV outside the home, North Carolina is trying to pass a law so that free EV charging is a thing of the past. It's free at various locations and rest stops so they want the state to pay for gas and diesel fill ups at state run locations to make it fair.

Sounds stupid? Well, it is, but they're run by a party that hates the idea that alternative fuels have a future in this country.

All the best,
Nonoise