California's Power Grid Hits 95% Renewable Energy. Sort of. (latimes.com) 187
Something remarkable happened last weekend, according to a climate change newsletter by the Los Angeles Times.
California, the world's fifth-largest economy, hit nearly 95% renewable energy. Sort of... There are several caveats. For one thing, Saturday's 94.5% figure — a record, as confirmed to me by the California Independent System Operator — was fleeting, lasting just four seconds. It was specific to the state's main power grid, which covers four-fifths of California but doesn't include Los Angeles, Sacramento and several other regions. It came at a time of year defined by abundant sunshine and relatively cool weather, meaning it's easier for renewable power to do the job traditionally done by fossil fuels.
And fossil fuels actually were doing part of the job — more than the 94.5% figure might suggest. California was producing enough clean power to supply nearly 95% of its in-state needs, but it was also burning a bunch of natural gas and exporting electricity to its Western neighbors. It's impossible to say exactly how much of the Golden State's own supply was coming from renewables.
That said, what happened on Saturday is definitely a big deal.... The 94.5% record may have been fleeting, but it wasn't some isolated spike. Most of Saturday afternoon, the renewables number topped 90%, with solar and wind farms doing the bulk of the work and geothermal, biomass and hydropower facilities making smaller contributions. Add in the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant — which isn't counted toward California's renewables mandate — and there was enough climate-friendly power at times Saturday to account for more than 100% of the state's electricity needs...
The important thing now is making sure the puzzle pieces of the grid fit together on hot summer evenings, like the ones last August when insufficient supplies after sundown led to rolling blackouts.
California, the world's fifth-largest economy, hit nearly 95% renewable energy. Sort of... There are several caveats. For one thing, Saturday's 94.5% figure — a record, as confirmed to me by the California Independent System Operator — was fleeting, lasting just four seconds. It was specific to the state's main power grid, which covers four-fifths of California but doesn't include Los Angeles, Sacramento and several other regions. It came at a time of year defined by abundant sunshine and relatively cool weather, meaning it's easier for renewable power to do the job traditionally done by fossil fuels.
And fossil fuels actually were doing part of the job — more than the 94.5% figure might suggest. California was producing enough clean power to supply nearly 95% of its in-state needs, but it was also burning a bunch of natural gas and exporting electricity to its Western neighbors. It's impossible to say exactly how much of the Golden State's own supply was coming from renewables.
That said, what happened on Saturday is definitely a big deal.... The 94.5% record may have been fleeting, but it wasn't some isolated spike. Most of Saturday afternoon, the renewables number topped 90%, with solar and wind farms doing the bulk of the work and geothermal, biomass and hydropower facilities making smaller contributions. Add in the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant — which isn't counted toward California's renewables mandate — and there was enough climate-friendly power at times Saturday to account for more than 100% of the state's electricity needs...
The important thing now is making sure the puzzle pieces of the grid fit together on hot summer evenings, like the ones last August when insufficient supplies after sundown led to rolling blackouts.
The Next Step (Score:3, Interesting)
So now we come to a much more interesting and concerning question, which is: how come we’re not making an even more aggressive push towards renewables? The energy source is free. The fuel is clean and therefore healthier for us.
I think there might be at least a couple of reasons. Firstly, we’re still building our more renewable capacity. That costs a lot of money, so the unit-cost from renewable sources is still higher than it could be, because the profits are being invested in more capacity. This, in turn, means that this inflated cost of renewables remains close enough to the cost of generation from fossil fuel plants to enable them to remain viable for a bit longer.
But we need to be careful here. Solar panels might need an infrequent wipe down, but have a lifespan of 25 years. Wind turbines require more maintenance, but are engineered for long life too.
Right now, as consumers, we’re likely still paying the same prices for energy that we have traditionally - sometimes more. Yet the energy generators, if they are investing wisely, should see their costs go down. We need to be careful to ensure that this doesn’t turn in to yet another great rip-off as the companies enjoy the benefits of the switch to renewable energy, while we get screwed over on pricing.
Lots of ways we could do this, of course - from ensuring that all new homes have solar panels on the roof and two-way meters, to working with town planning agencies and builders to ensure that homes are oriented towards the sun for efficiency, to exploring micro-generating with ‘back garden’ wind turbines in suitable locations and maybe even micro-hydro if there is running water nearby.
But the key thing is to move towards that tipping point - the economic watershed beyond which fossil fuels become too expensive to operate. That’s the single best way to accelerate adoption of renewables.
Re:The Next Step (Score:5, Insightful)
Solar power during the day and then a combination of wind, hydroelectric (where available) and grid batteries - that meet our consumption demands - can easily be made.
If it was easy, it would've been done already. To fully supply the demand, the renewables must consistently produce 200-300% the demand during the day to account for night usage and storage losses. 95% for a few seconds does not cut it.
That costs a lot of money, so the unit-cost from renewable sources is still higher than it could be, because the profits are being invested in more capacity. This, in turn, means that this inflated cost of renewables remains close enough to the cost of generation from fossil fuel plants to enable them to remain viable for a bit longer.
You noticed that money is a problem. I hope you also understand that money costs money in the form of interest. If something requires a lot of capital to build and takes too long to produce profits, it can easily lead to a loss for the builder even if the underlying assets are profitable.
Lots of ways we could do this, of course - from ensuring that all new homes have solar panels on the roof and two-way meters, to working with town planning agencies and builders to ensure that homes are oriented towards the sun for efficiency, to exploring micro-generating with ‘back garden’ wind turbines in suitable locations and maybe even micro-hydro if there is running water nearby.
None of those are cost-effective. For one, there's not a lot of new housing being built. Secondly, a solar roof costs an average of $20,000 to install, plus another $10,000 for batteries. The same money invested into a 5% bond yields about $125 per month, more than most electricity bills. The solar roof doesn't even take care of all of your usage, so you're still paying the electricity provider for the rest. The other two options are even worse and also significantly less reliable.
Re: (Score:2)
For one, there's not a lot of new housing being built.
But there is. [dsnews.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Not in California there isn't. Especially not in SF or LA where pretty much every square foot of flat land that could be built on has already been built on. Houses around here are 40 years old and they aren't being torn down. New houses are a tiny fraction of what's needed to convert to renewables.
Re: (Score:2)
To fully supply the demand, the renewables must consistently produce 200-300% the demand during the day to account for night usage and storage losses. 95% for a few seconds does not cut it.
Why do you make up numbers when you simply could look them up?
Re: The Next Step (Score:5, Informative)
Currently Germany has 200% of its electricity production in renewables (nameplate capacity). You can look at how much annually it takes from those, and how instead they had nuclear replaced by coal.
Electricity production 2010 vs 2019 in Germany :
coal: 134,2 TWh vs 105 TWh
lignite: 107 TWh vs 52 TWh
nuclear: 133 TWh vs 71 TWh
gas: 86 TWh vs 87 TWh
renewables: 101 TWh vs. 234 TWh
Re: (Score:3)
You are mixing up electricity production and energy production / consumption. Total primary energy consumption in Germany in 2020: Renewables 16.6% Nuclear 6.0% Lignite 8.1% Coal 7.7% Gas 26.6% Oil 33.7% Other 1.3%. (Total: 11,784 PJ)
Oil and gas are mostly used for industrial purposes and transport. Yes, this is not good, but it is not really different in most other industrial countries. But the use of renewables for *electricity production* in Germany was a full success.
Your others numbers seem wrong. G
Re: (Score:2)
Germany does not import electricity from Russia and Ukraine (and neither of of them is part of the European grid - so I doubt there is much trade with Europe)
They are connected. They simply do not trade much.
The Pan European - Asian grid goes from UK/Portugal in the west, till Mongolia in the east. With some undersea lines going to Norway, even Icelands, and north Africa.
So the idea that there were 33.6 TWh imports of electricity from Russia or Ukrainian coal plants is deep in the BS category.
Correct.
Th
Re: (Score:2)
In what sense is there a European - Asian grid? There are some DC connections but Russia is not part of the synchronous European grid. It was just in the news that Ukraine wants to disconnect from the Russian grid and join the European grid.
Anyway, there was *no* commercial exchange of electricity between Russia or Ukraine and Germany. Germany exported 7.6 TWh to Czechia and imported 5.7 TWh from Czechia in 2019.
Re: (Score:2)
The biggest synchronized grid on the globe goes from Icelands till Mongolia and includes Russia and Ukraine.
However there is the smaller part, which is called "Synchronous grid of Continental Europe" (no idea why the distinction - probably power transfer in that grid can be done at will, and in the bigger grid only on a preannounced schedule)
I guess while they are synchronized, total energy transfer is low.
Re: (Score:2)
Renewables like wind have a yearly production of 25% of nameplate capacity, solar 15%.
That is nonsense. I suggest to read a book about it.
You can look at how much annually it takes from those, and how instead they had nuclear replaced by coal.
That is a lie.
Germany replaced both coal and nuclear with renewables.
From roughly 2% renewables in 1990 to roughly 50% renewables in 2020.
You know that. It was posted often enough on /. or in any other relevant news.
So why spreading a lie? You have some secret agenda?
Glossing over the real problems (Score:5, Insightful)
Solar power during the day and then a combination of wind, hydroelectric (where available) and grid batteries - that meet our consumption demands - can easily be made.
Riiiight. Sure it can. Um, no. In fact, the problems are *not* solved - especially the storage problem.
California was generating 95% of its power needs using renewables - if you ignore all of those nat-gas plants that were exporting power. Only, you cannot separate the two. One of the main features of nat-gas plants is that they adjust very quickly. Cloud in front of the sun, shading a bige chunk of solar? Crank up the gas. Ah, the sun is back? Turn down the gas.
There are cloudy days. There are nights with little wind. You need serious storage to cover the eventualities, and the storage problem is *not* solved.
I grant that you absolutely could solve it with hydroelectric. But consider the amount of power you need to store. Then count the number of valleys you need to flood. Finally, tell me that anyone is going to let you do that.
Grid batteries? They're great for stablizing the grid in the short term (seconds, at most minutes). Long-term storage? Not realistic. California uses nearly one TWh (terawatt-hour) per day. To store that represents around half of the entire annual global production of batteries. That's to provide one day of storage, for one state.
Re: (Score:2)
How much you need to store (energy supply) depends on demand. How much demand there is depends on the price. Therefore, like everything else, how much energy supply you need depends on how much you're selling it for.
So you don't need a whole lot of storage to prevent blackouts, you only need to crank up the price, and provide an automated way for people's appliances to respond in real-time.
For me, I'd want the dryer to turn itself off first, because I can
Re: (Score:2)
How much demand there is depends on the price.
That is not how evergy grids work for house hold customers.
Or do YOU have a variable price depending on day/time/year or spot market for your energy?
You have a smart meter to start the washing machine at night when energy is cheap? Or at peak sun power, when it should be/could be cheap?
Re: (Score:2)
I wish! So I have to set the timer on the washer manually, to run early in the morning when electricity is cheap.
In fact, my solar clothes dryer works quickest when the sun is out.
Re: (Score:2)
I wish! So I have to set the timer on the washer manually, to run early in the morning when electricity is cheap.
If you have no smart meter then you pay the same price regardless when you activate your device. Or how actually do you think your utility is metering you?
Re: (Score:2)
Then count the number of valleys you need to flood. Finally, tell me that anyone is going to let you do that.
Should not be a problem when people finally realize that a valley, with a lake, is a recreational zone. You can fish, bath, swim, relax, hike, be in a hotel, sail, what ever you want. You could go hardcore and settle fresh water dolphins there. Otherwise such a valley is just a chunk of rock, depending on hight over sea level with sparse trees, perhaps a forrest, or no trees at all.
California is full
Re: (Score:2)
This is a person who's never been to California...the ancestral home of the NIMBY.
Re: (Score:3)
Hydro? In California? The state that is so water poor it has
Hydro makes a lot of sense in California. There is plenty of water in the state, but it's intermittent. There are years of floods and years of drought. Every summer the rain stops, every winter it starts again. This means that to take advantage of the water, you need reservoires anyway.
Hydro storage isnâ(TM)t feasible almost anywhere. You need water, you need a large height difference close to energy needs and enough space on the foot and top of a hill to put a basin
If only there were some mountains in California called the Sierra Nevadas.
Re: (Score:2)
Actually bro, the little balls are to stop the oxidation of the bromine in the water to bromate which is more toxic than the bromide salts. But yeah worry about "chemicals" while having no understanding of chemistry, that will work out well for you.
Re: (Score:3)
Renewables are already there cheapest form of generation. In the UK you can save money by switching to renewable only energy and letting other people pay the fossil/nuclear premium.
The reason the transition isn't faster is mostly entrenched interests, both generation and the grid. Also government's taking too long to catch up with planning permission for new renewables.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Pumped hydro has insane capital costs Erm, simply: nope?
and environmental impact. Nope again? You make a lake where there was nothing before. Fish, birds, water birds, and other animals like that. Also humans who like to be in nature like that. Why do you not once visit an artificial lake instead of sitting on your couch and blubbering nonsense?
Re: (Score:2)
Again, a person who's never tried to do it. Pumped storage *is* insanely expensive because most of the good sites are already in use, much as it is for conventional large hydro. Then, if the reservoir on either end is visible to somebody, the EIR will be insanely difficult and the legal challenges endless. Plus, there will be endangered species impacts is either of those reservoirs are on natural streams and open to the air. If you look a little more carefully, you'll find that practically no pumped storage
Nobody wants to pay for it (Score:2)
Oil and gas are already monetized and are much easier to maintain economic control over. The people with all the money (who write the [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
how come we’re not making an even more aggressive push towards renewables?
Mainly because your first paragraph is a lie you picked up somewhere.
California hits 95% renewables... (Score:5, Insightful)
Except for the cities...
Re: (Score:2)
Yet you didn't have the balls to post under your own account name.
Your opinion is worthless.
Western neighbours? (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
I wasn't aware Atlantis had already been rediscovered and that we were trading with them? Do they even need electricity? I figured they'd have zero-point power by now... :/
I guess it depends on how you define wet and neighbor. A plant east of San Diego sending power to Reno is sending it west; although technically its hard to tell what power is actually going where.
Why (Score:2)
Is it still showing 0 comments?
Re: (Score:2)
Switch to "Request Desktop Site" and the comment count will show as normal.
Something has been screwed up in the mobile site slashcode the last couple days.
Re: Why (Score:2)
Because the one guy who knows how to fix it probably mived on to greener pa$ture$ and the woketards running the site are too busy scrubbing the code for suddenly naughty words to notice they've introduced a bug.
Re: Why (Score:2)
Makes sense
California is the world's fifth-largest economy. (Score:5, Insightful)
"Renewables
16 mind-blowing facts about California's economy [businessinsider.com]: "If it were its own nation, California would have the fifth largest economy in the world."
The Path to Give California 12 Senators, and Vermont Just One [theatlantic.com] (Jan. 2, 2019)
"Today the voting power of a citizen in Wyoming, the smallest state in terms of population, is about 67 times that of a citizen in the largest state of California..."
Re: (Score:2)
Just wait until DC statehood (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Of course they did. And I would love it if we divided up California and Texas into numerous smaller states.
Re: (Score:2)
It would make much more sense to fix the retarded archaic american voting, elecetion, government system than splitting up states, with the aim to fix "something", which would not be fixed after wards, but just "leveled a bit".
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
ThatÃ(TM)s because a vote in Wyoming shouldnÃ(TM)t be overridden by a larger vote from California,
But a vote from Wyoming should be overridden by many more votes from California, because otherwise a small number Wyoming residents are able to hold back progress for a large number of Californians. Somehow you think that it's fair for a minority to abuse a majority.
they did think about these things when making up the congress and senate you know
And I know that they did it to placate slave states.
Re: (Score:2)
The whole idea behind the House and Senate being different was not a mistake. California has infinitely more voice in the house then any other state. Montana had 1 vote and I think will have 2 house seats come 2022.
The Senate on the other hand is not about representing the people but rather the States themselves. They have different rules for that chamber and it was done on purpose. Each state getting two Senators regardless of population was intentional.
If you make the Senate just like the House, what's th
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Liar or fool?
As it turns out, you are a fool [time.com]. Try research [theatlantic.com], it helps.
Re: California is the world's fifth-largest econo (Score:2, Insightful)
https://thefederalistpapers.or... [thefederalistpapers.org]
Re: (Score:2)
The north didn't want to count slaves as people for deciding how many house seats each state would get. They eventually came to a compromise on that.
Western neighbors (Score:2)
I did not know California had neighboring states to the west
Re: (Score:2)
Alaska and Hawaii.
Re: (Score:2)
Lool, took me a split second to write the same, and I'm just a German yahoo ...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
if you want to focus all your energies on a specific pollutant, you should choose something better than CO2 because that one is tricky as hell. And you will never get rid of it.
When I seal my roof I'm not trying to get rid of water, I'm just trying to keep most of it out of my house. Not all of it; I have pipes that bring water inside intentionally! But they do it selectively.
People can grasp this logic if they are not looking for an excuse not to understand.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
For CO2, you can only burn less or do it more efficiently
Okay, so you can reduce CO2 emissions through efficiency. I think we're on the same page so far...
What basically means recommending to create a better engine
We have a "better engine". It's called an "electric motor".
My point was that if you focus most of your efforts on pretty much any other pollutant, the CO2 emissions would probably be reduced too as far as they occur together with most of the other ones
I don't think that's true. It's true if you focus on methane, which breaks down into CO2 and water vapor. But it's not true if you focus on let's say CFCs, which are sort of a way to avoid CO2 emissions, in that the alternatives to using them in production involve consuming more energy. So if you only reduced CFCs you probably would increase CO2 emissio
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The problem is that your point makes no actual sense.
You don't reduce CO2 by targeting other emissions. That's not how this works at all.
You reduce CO2 by targeting CO2, period. Along the way you may reduce other emissions by reducing CO2 emissions. But if your goal is to reduce AGW, then your goal is to reduce CO2, because CO2 is the primary force behind AGW.
If you still don't understand this, sorry, it just doesn't get any simpler than the way it actually works.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I am the one not understanding? OK. Bye.
I don't know if you're understanding but pretending not to for the sake of argument, but you're certainly acting like you don't understand and I do not have the inclination to cross-examine you to determine which it is. Regardless, what you are saying doesn't just make no sense, it is actively incorrect. You reduce CO2 by targeting CO2, not by wishing or hoping.
Statistics, etc. (Score:2)
Yet there's a reason why Nordstream 2 is such a big deal: the Energiewende is mostly about replacing nuclear with coal and gas. Coal (lignite) got a free pass until 2038, while new gas plants are popping up left and right.
Yes, there are a few days during the year
Re: (Score:2)
Germany also regularly has such spikes, which usually result in Germany paying the rest of Europe to take their power, while us consumers get shafted with the fees in addition to paying for more and more taxes to pay for for the 'Energiewende'.
Germany generally exports a lot of electricity. And yes, their are time points where the electricity price becomes negative. Still, the average price export price tends to be higher than the import price. In 2020, the average price for exported electricity from Germany was 45.27 Euro per MWh, while the average price for imported electricity was 42.87 Euro per MWh. So the general idea that Germany has to pay their neighbours to take their power is completely wrong. in 2020, Germany had a net income from exp
Re: (Score:2)
Yet there's a reason why Nordstream 2 is such a big deal: the Energiewende is mostly about replacing nuclear with coal and gas. Coal (lignite) got a free pass until 2038, while new gas plants are popping up left and right.
Perhaps you want to google a bit about Germanys change in the energy mix.
Your post is so wrong it is arguable if you are:
a) lying
b) stupid
c) uninformed
d) paid to transmit some propaganda
On which note, Greenpeace is literally selling natural gas in Germany. That should tell you all you need
Diablo Canyon is about as friendly as it sounds (Score:2)
The nuclear plant in Diablo Canyon is located close to three fault lines. The closest is only 650 yards away, and was only discovered in 2008, so there is literally no structural considerations for it. The second closest is 2000 yards away, and was discovered in 1971 after construction had already begun. By comparison the Yunodake Fault that ruptured causing the Fukushima earthquake disaster is 50km from the Fukushima plant.
The Diablo Canyon nuclear plant is also the exact same Westinghouse design as Fukush
Re: (Score:2)
Feel free to take it up with the NRC, but they would just tell you in far more detail how Diablo Canyon won't ever turn into another Fukushima Daiichi. Heck, they have a lot of online documentation in the NRC library that can be read up on, and the certification for DC is freely available as well.
But good job with the FUD and other fear-mongeri
Re: (Score:2)
It is the same in Germany.
Basically every plant is build on top or close to a fault line which is 101 geology if you study in the university. Germany is full with such fault lines. But as the youngest big earth quake was several 100,000 years ago: they gambled that the population wold not care.
Unfortunately it is common knowledge since the mid 1980s that we are sitting on 2 dozens of disasters just waiting to happen. Hence: the population tried to get rid of them since the 1980s.
Unfortunately there are - mo
Look! I created unobtainium! (Score:2)
But it decayed in 4 seconds.
Spinning reserve? (Score:2)
I wonder how much spinning reserve (fossil fuel power) had to be kept online but unsused to be ready to pick up the splack when the renewables fell out after those 4 seconds. Don't get me wrong, renewables, within reason, are a good thing. But it has to be correctly used in an pragmatic mix with more dispatchable/base power sources (Nuclear, Hydroelectric, Natural Gas, etc) not one that just looks good on paper for greenwashing or political points.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure gridscale wind turbines don't work like that. First off due to the variability of wind, wind turbines don't usually connect directly to the grid, they have to go through a AC-DC-AC conversion to match the grid frequency (~60hz) as the electrical frequency of the turbines themselves varies wildly. They can do something akin to "spinning reserve" by idling some turbines when there is a surplus of power on the grid and making sure as many turbines as possible are running when there is too lit
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
they have to go through a AC-DC-AC conversion to match the grid frequency (~60hz)
Yes.
They can do something akin to "spinning reserve"
Yes they can do. As they continue spininng when the wind drops suddenly.
something akin to "spinning reserve" by idling some turbines
No on is doing that. That would be just insane. Insane expensive and insane wasteful.
Actually in the real world the term "spinning reserves" does not even exist.
Perhaps you want to google, the terms are overlapping:
i) second reserve (as in t
Re: (Score:2)
Base power is not dispatchable.
That is why it is called "base power" or "base load".
The old nukes in Germany are not dispatchable either, hence they were used for base load.
4 seconds.... (Score:2)
Re:There are lies (Score:5, Interesting)
There are more interesting stories here.
The grid hit 95% renewable energy and didn't collapse or explode as predicted. Somehow it managed to balance those sources and react to both changing demand and supply without issue.
California is also nearing the point where renewable energy cannot only provide 100% of its own demand sometimes, but also be exported to other states.
Bug! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Did you all notice that your posts are not shown in your "homepage" anymore?
Yep. Anything after April 30 doesn't show.
Re: (Score:2)
California is also nearing the point where renewable energy cannot only provide 100% of its own demand sometimes, but also be exported to other states.
California remains by far [eia.gov] the biggest importer of electricity in the US.
Re: (Score:2)
well when power sells for a fortune in CA why wouldn't everyone want to sell their power here?
Re:There are lies (Score:5, Informative)
The grid hit 95% renewable energy and didn't collapse or explode as predicted. Somehow it managed to balance those sources and react to both changing demand and supply without issue.
Because like Germany's grid, California's grid allows it to share power with nearby states. California can draw from Washington's dams in summer and Arizona nuclear in the winter. And like Germany, it uses natural gas as a backup source.
Re:There are lies (Score:5, Informative)
Germany is an interesting example. They reduced their carbon emissions by 35% and need to do another 20% to hit their goal of a 55% reduction by 2030. So clearly their plan is working, and yes that does include emissions in other countries when they import energy from them.
Again, this runs contrary to the popular narrative that they are building coal plants or exporting emissions.
Re: (Score:2)
And like Germany, it uses natural gas as a backup source.
Germany does not use natural gas as back up source.
That would not make any sense when we can import power from around.
Re: (Score:2)
10% of Germany's power is from natural gas. It's not the primary power source, but it has been on the rise and replacing the sharp drop in coal fired power generation in Germany.
Re: (Score:2)
So over 30 years it rose from 8% to 10% ... hm ... up to you to interpret that significance.
but it has been on the rise and replacing the sharp drop in coal fired power generation in Germany.
How can an increase from 8% to 10% replace a drop from 60% to 30%?
Care to explain that?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: There are lies (Score:2)
didn't collapse or explode
For FOUR SECONDS. Not nearly long enough to support any of the rest of the claims you made in your post.
Re: (Score:2)
a significant improvement over zero seconds
Re:There are lies (Score:5, Interesting)
Prices went up somewhat. It's currently at 0.26 cents per kwh at lower monthly usages [pge.com]. That's about 60% higher than 10 years ago adjusted for inflation, but still very affordable compared to how much rent, wages and everything else went up. They're also rolling out on-demand pricing which is more expensive normally, but may be cheaper if you avoid evening usage or install solar with batteries. The connection fee is about $10 a month either way.
Re: (Score:2)
Prices went up somewhat. It's currently at 0.26 cents per kwh at lower monthly usages [pge.com].
0.26 cents =/= $0.26
0.26 cents is $0.0026
Reminds me of https://science.slashdot.org/story/06/12/09/0625245/verizon-cant-do-math
Re: (Score:2)
when I first moved to CA it was 9.5 cents, now it's about double what inflation alone would suggest.
Re: (Score:3)
I've lived in CA and this is an absolute scam.
First of all, the baseline allowance is an absolute joke. Parts of Alameda and Contra Costa county are in zone X [pge.com] which means 10.3KWH a day according to this chart [pge.com]. This is in a place where we'd have 90+F days and be using a 1500W AC for a modest house (3BR, 1500 sq ft, far smaller than some of the >2500 ft^2 houses nearby) which means you're over the cap just for air conditioning. Add in a refrigerator (700W in such hot weather) and we routinely were at doubl
Re: (Score:2)
This is not a troll. California really will never bring that cost per KwH down. Been going nothing but up my entire adult life of paying the bill so far. Just because they generate more power doesn't mean it's going to get any cheaper. They'll just find additional buyers out of state if need be or otherwise reduce the amount produced.
Our power never gets cheaper.
Re: There are lies (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: There are lies (Score:5, Insightful)
Without LA or Sacramento is a pretty fucking large caveat, large enough to negate the whole summary.
Re: (Score:2)
Without LA or Sacramento is a pretty fucking large caveat, large enough to negate the whole summary.
I think you mean without LA. Sacramento has a population of 500k.
Re: (Score:2)
To be pedantic, SMUD serves all of Sacramento County, not just the city. Total population clears a million (6 cities, including Sacramento, and the "uncity" county area that's developed at suburban densities). Add in Roseville, in Placer County, which incidentally has its own municipal power utility, El Dorado HIlls, West Sacramento and Davis (Yolo County), and southern Yuba County, and the metro area population is about 2 million. Except for Roseville, the areas outside Sacramento County area all PG&E.
Re:There are lies (Score:5, Informative)
Saying âoeCaliforniaâ(TM)s power grid hits 95% renewable energyâ when it only happened for 4 seconds is like saying a twin turbo v8 car gets 100 miles per gallon because it rolled down a 100 mile hill in neutral and only 1 gallon of gas was used while the engine idled.
Saying "Californiaâ(TM)s power grid hits 95% renewable energy when it only happened for 4 seconds" is like saying a car can do 316.11mph when it only does it for a few seconds to prove a point. Which it can, and it did. Just like California's grid hit 95% renewables.
If they were trying to say "California now runs on 95% renewable power" because it happened for four seconds that would be a lie. But this is merely proper use of language which has confused you.
Re: (Score:2)
Saying "Californiaâ(TM)s power grid hits 95% renewable energy when it only happened for 4 seconds" is like saying a car can do 316.11mph when it only does it for a few seconds to prove a point.
I've gotten my car to do 316mpg without difficulty. I don't know why you-all are still buying gas guzzlers.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe he is still using his 10 year old car that's entirely paid off but still runs great? Kind of silly to get rid of a perfectly usable car just because something new and shiny comes out.
Re: (Score:2)
My car recently got 3000mpg for a short time. I think you missed the point of the comment.
Re: (Score:2)
At least now we al know: you have a car. :P
Or even more than one
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, and sometimes it travels downhill.
A remarkably fuel efficient way to travel I recommend it to everyone.
Re: (Score:2)
Well a friend of mine bought a Tesla S, Octobre or so last year. (ActuallyI think it was the year before that. That Corona thing makes my time feeling pretty bad)
They made a trip through the Alps. Had a hotel booked that had a charger.
Turned out they advertized it and confirmed it in the booking email: but had none.
So when they planned the trip home, the car was on like 35% battery level and the route planner told them they would reach home with like 3%.
So they took the chance and started traveling home. N
Re: (Score:2)