Natural gas plants having trouble competing with solar?
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But guess what? Utilities do not use ICE with the exception of Gas Turbine Engines (Jet Engines) for which are used for Peakers but not very efficient. Utilities use large boilers and heat exchanges to make 600 degree liquid steam.
Now go get your advocacy 5000 gallon pressure cooker, and see how long it takes to bring it up to pressure and then cool it down. When that cloud passes over you have a few seconds to replace the power. Not even a jet engine can come on line that fast.Last edited by Sunking; 06-13-2016, 07:29 PM.MSEE, PEComment
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You can say that again because you have no idea what you are talking about. Just making it up and wishing. It is people like you who give conservation and renewable energy production a Bad Name, and is exactly why the major majority of the country rejects your ideas. I am not the only one telling you that either now am I. JPM and other engineers have kicked your butt many times.MSEE, PEComment
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I work on a 1MW system at a high school that would go off line just about every day. If the POCO did not have enough backup power running at the time the school and it's neighbors would have been in the dark for at least 15 minutes. Not necessarily a crisis but certainly very disruptive.
Power does not just come from thin air. You need something to generate it and Natural gas peakers my take a few minutes to start up while larger plants take hours to start up from a cold shutdown.Comment
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Consider a city with enough of these storage and load shifting methods to ride through the shortest night of the year in a very windy and sunny June.
Assume that that 12 hours of storage gave enough warning to let them do a full shutdown of the fossil fuel fired plants, for that one night.
Would the city not use less fossil fuel that night?Last edited by DanKegel; 06-13-2016, 10:04 PM.Comment
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And then you run the high risk of power outages should an RE system suddenly shut down. Which they do. Large Solar inverters will shut down if any of their anti island software triggers are met.
I work on a 1MW system at a high school that would go off line just about every day. If the POCO did not have enough backup power running at the time the school and it's neighbors would have been in the dark for at least 15 minutes. Not necessarily a crisis but certainly very disruptive.
Power does not just come from thin air. You need something to generate it and Natural gas peakers my take a few minutes to start up while larger plants take hours to start up from a cold shutdown.Comment
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Power does not just come from thin air. You need something to generate it and Natural gas peakers my take a few minutes to start up while larger plants take hours to start up from a cold shutdown.
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Looking at
Scientists report 2015 as the Earth's warmest year on record; majorities of Americans have heard about these reports and believe them to be true. There is a sharp political divide on whether the record warmth was human-caused or natural.
it seems more agree with me than with you about climate change at the moment.Comment
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That's the problem the Smart Inverter Working Group is addressing via Rule 21. Rule 21 is a new set of rules that specifically do NOT shut down when the grid glitches. They were developed due to the experience of POCO's in places like Hawaii that have a large amount of solar penetration, and are currently being rolled out in Hawaii, Arizona and California. As the overall population of inverters becomes more compliant to Rule 21 due to new installs and retrofits, that problem goes away.
Yep. And you always need them. But as solar generation increases you need fewer of them operating (or on hot standby) at any given time.
You would hope there would be less hot standby but somehow a plant just sitting there waiting for RE to fail seems like a loss to the people who own them. So like some of the nuclear plants I would expect to see natural gas plants that sit idle would probably just shut down for good.
What I am surprised about Hawaii is the lack of any interest in using geo thermal energy to generate power. They are sitting on top of a hot spot like Iceland is.Comment
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Major majority? As opposed to the minor majority?
Looking at
Scientists report 2015 as the Earth's warmest year on record; majorities of Americans have heard about these reports and believe them to be true. There is a sharp political divide on whether the record warmth was human-caused or natural.
it seems more agree with me than with you about climate change at the moment.Comment
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Remember that costs due to efficiency losses at the transformer owned by the consumer is paid by the consumer. The losses in the POCO's transformers is just passed along to the customer by adding it to the delivery cost. Not much of an incentive for the POCO to make any improvements to their infrastructure if it brings in revenue.Comment
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Major majority? As opposed to the minor majority?
Looking at
Scientists report 2015 as the Earth's warmest year on record; majorities of Americans have heard about these reports and believe them to be true. There is a sharp political divide on whether the record warmth was human-caused or natural.
it seems more agree with me than with you about climate change at the moment.
BTW, public opinion, like innuendo, does not always coincide with facts, causes or reality. Science, which you claim to like, but also claim no particular expertize about, needs proof, not press. Public opinion does not quality as proof - at least not yet.Comment
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