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Power United States

Drought is Stressing California's Power Grid (theverge.com) 266

Drought is putting pressure on California's already stressed-out grid. From a report: As water reservoirs run dry, there's been a significant drop in hydroelectric generation. Without enough water pressure to quickly turn turbine blades, there could be electricity shortages right when residents need it the most. Rolling blackouts have already become a new norm for the state as utilities shut down power lines in an attempt to avoid sparking fires during hot, dry weather. But summertime outages also occur when residents crank up their air conditioners to beat the heat and demand outpaces the available power supply.

"California relies on hydro for so much of its demand, so any drought can put the state in a tight position," said Lindsay Aramayo, an industry economist with the US Energy Information Administration. Hydropower is a significant source of energy for the state. In 2019, it made up about 17 percent of California's electricity mix. And while California is no stranger to drought, this is particularly bad. More than a third of the state is experiencing "exceptional drought," and more than 40 percent of its residents are living under a drought state of emergency.

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Drought is Stressing California's Power Grid

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  • Renewables (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:27PM (#61579405)

    Has California considered solar?

    • Apparently they have hydro - sometimes.

    • Re:Renewables (Score:4, Insightful)

      by sabri ( 584428 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:53PM (#61579465)

      Has California considered solar?

      Duh. Most of CA's electricity during the day is solar. Shit happens when the sun is gone.

      Thanks to the greenies opposing new nuclear plants, we're depending on coal and gas powered energy at night.

      • by Chas ( 5144 )

        Honestly, I believe in nuclear power.
        But it just seems fundamentally unwise to build nuclear reactors in a highly active fault zone.
        There's "risk management", and then there's "dropping trou and shoving your ass in the fire".

        Maybe micro-nuclear will be a safer option.
        But it's SERIOUSLY going to depend on the tech behind it.

        • Nuclear relies on water cooling as well.

          And nuclear power generation plants have been shut down or run at reduced capacity many times during droughts and heat waves.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            Citation needed that any nuclear shutdowns were related to drought. Because California reactors have used sea water for cooling, and I think everyone would have noticed a drought bad enough to drop the Pacific Ocean more than a few feet.

            Yes it's a bad idea to put reactors on fault lines, utilities stopped doing that decades ago. And it was really only like two nationwide, I think you're thinking of the hysteria over tsunami damage to nuke plants, which can't happen in CA for analogous reasons to why frozen

            • by Chas ( 5144 )

              No. I'm thinking specifically about California.

              I'm not thinking about Fukushima.
              Because Fukushima survived the quakes.
              It failed due to corner-cutting and stupid design decisions.
              - 1: Not raising the height of the sea wall to match historical wave records.
              - 2: What idiot puts backup generators FOR A SEASIDE REACTOR...IN THE BASEMENT?

              Had the seawall been of the proper height, the facility might still have flooded, but nowhere near tot he extent it did.
              Had they located the backup generators in a more elevated

      • by tomhath ( 637240 )

        Most of CA's electricity during the day is solar.

        More like 15%.

        • Re:Renewables (Score:5, Informative)

          by Known Nutter ( 988758 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @07:31PM (#61579993)

          Most of CA's electricity during the day is solar.

          More like 15%.

          "Most" is wrong. 15% is closer. As of this post, Cal ISO is showing renewables as 37% of the total supply, providing 14,000 MW. Solar is providing 64% of the renewable power, or 9,118 MW. Total demand is 38,371 MW. Solar is kicking in 23% of total demand.

          https://www.caiso.com/TodaysOu... [caiso.com]

        • Real time data is below, right now in the afternoon it is 35% solar, today at high noon renewables altogether made up more than 50% - even today when all the AC's are still running full blast.
          When it's windy and cool and Sunny CO2 goes down to 0.010-0.050gCO2/kWh from the current 0.200gCO2/kWh.

          http://www.caiso.com/TodaysOut... [caiso.com]

      • Thanks to the greenies opposing new nuclear plants, we're depending on coal and gas powered energy at night.

        An unfortunate turn of events but installing batteries can power the grid at night. It's an investment but it will eliminate your dependence on coal and gas. Also, yes they are already installing grid scale batteries in various locations... just not enough fast enough.

        Frankly, I don't think the politicians in your state did a sufficient job of ensuring the timely installation of batteries.

      • According to CAISO, batteries make up 1GW or so at peak time, out of 40GW in summer.
        That is up about 10X from last year I think.

        CAISO also lets you see the power mix, down to 5 minutes resolution.
        And CO2/kWh.

        http://www.caiso.com/TodaysOut... [caiso.com]

      • Shit happens when the sun is gone.

        Depends on the people but I, for one, also use the bathroom during the day.

    • They should use solar to power water pumps during the day and turn the damn into a gravity battery. Pump that water from the Pacific up into the reservoir using solar. Then you have the hydro on demand.

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        Ignoring the distance that the water needs to be pumped, pumping a bunch of salt water into fresh water reservoirs and then letting it out to go down a fresh water river might not be good for the environment, the farmers using that water and the people drinking that water.
        The turbines likely aren't designed for corrosive salt water either.

        • I was thinking more of creating a sealed system. But I didn't consider the turbine corrosion. I guess you could build salt water resistant turbines though.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            A sealed system might work if you could find the right location, a large canyon or such close to the ocean, not too remote for connecting to the grid and where ruining the native environment would be OK.
            It does make me wonder why not find a long skinny inlet, dam it off and use the tidal difference to generate power. Might be hard to make it storm proof and I'm sure more knowledgeable people have considered it.
            I'd think there is no reason that salt water resistant turbines couldn't be built, I was thinking

      • by jezwel ( 2451108 )
        Don't forget to desalinate it first, and now you have sufficient water supply too. You also need to overbuild on solar, but that's a given really by now, as you'll want to save the excess for the evening times in some form.
  • by theshowmecanuck ( 703852 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:29PM (#61579413) Journal
    Let's make all cars electric. None of those silly gas or fuel cell cars. Shock the power grid into working harder.
    • Re:I have an idea (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DigitAl56K ( 805623 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:41PM (#61579435)

      Yes, let's. Then let's charge all the cars when demand is low and let them return power to the grid when demand is high.

      • Often proposed as a technology that would solve a lot of problems. But not yet practical. For a start, no car on the market has that capability. It would need revised standards for chargers. Some type of standard for control. And there's the business side too - what incentive will let car-owners opt in to such a scheme?

        • An natural incentive for car owners to opt in would be if they could buy cheap power at night and then supplement expensive power during the day for their own home, which would also mean you wouldn't have to worry about problems integrating it with the grid, beyond the kind of solar management systems we already have.

          Every EV sold and supplementing a private home is reducing demand on the grid and the owner is financially benefitting. Heck, why even limit it to EVs? I have a hybrid in the driveway that's ju

          • Re:I have an idea (Score:5, Informative)

            by dpidcoe ( 2606549 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @05:39PM (#61579657)

            An natural incentive for car owners to opt in would be if they could buy cheap power at night and then supplement expensive power during the day for their own home, which would also mean you wouldn't have to worry about problems integrating it with the grid, beyond the kind of solar management systems we already have.

            You may want to refresh your knowledge on what peak hours are these days. In california, power delivery to the grid peaks at noon because of all the solar. The worst demand times are in the morning and afternoon, when people are waking up/coming home and the sun is rising/setting and the solar panels aren't producing much. These also happen to be the times when people need a full car battery to drive to work, and/or have just gotten home from work and have a low battery from the commute.

            The other problem with this scheme is wear and tear on your cars battery. It's only good for so many charge and discharge cycles before it falls out of spec and needs replacing. Who's going to pay for that?

            • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

              These also happen to be the times when people need a full car battery to drive to work, and/or have just gotten home from work and have a low battery from the commute.

              Puhlease. The average commute in CA is 35 miles (both ways). That's less than 15% of Tesla Model 3 battery. If you charge battery to 80% then you still have more than 50% of battery capacity to sell.

          • An natural incentive for car owners to opt in would be if they could buy cheap power at night
            Yes, but the real deal is sucking up surplus power for a negative price and get paid for charging - to balance the grid.

        • And there's the business side too - what incentive will let car-owners opt in to such a scheme?
          Earning money when they charge and balance the grid by sucking up surplus power.
          Earning money when they supply power to the grid when there is high demand.

          For a start, no car on the market has that capability. It would need revised standards for chargers.
          Both wrong, both exist.

        • "For a start, no car on the market has that capability."

          Incorrect, the Nissan Leaf has had this capability for years. Here is a link to one utility called OVO actually doing it https://www.ovoenergy.com/guid... [ovoenergy.com] and here's link to a second one by Octopus Energy https://www.octopusev.com/powe... [octopusev.com]
      • by tomhath ( 637240 )
        Because using a $50K car to store a few KWH of power is so cost effective.
      • Then let's charge all the cars when demand is low and let them return power to the grid when demand is high.

        The charging part is a great idea but what happens when you decide to get into your car to drive to the shops only to find that it has been drained because there was a surge in demand? Not only will power cycling your car's battery reduce its lifetime but it can take half an hour or more to charge it - possibly even longer with a home charger.

    • Let's make all cars electric. None of those silly gas or fuel cell cars.

      Yes we absolutely should.

      Shock the power grid into working harder.

      California has made some fundamental missteps in advancing toward renewable technology but that doesn't make it less of a good idea. What is means is that you cannot simply say what you do not want and ban it, you have to also allow things to be built. Politicians in California failed to ensure that more power generation was installed and as a result they have an constantly stressed power grid. If anything this should be a lesson in, "perfect is the enemy of good" because they tu

    • If it's that easy, we could simply cross the wires at the power production plant - no need for cars.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      It is a vicious cycle. Petrol cars cause climate change, which reducing the ice pack, which reduces the expected flow in the summer. There is a famous photo of a recent California governor with a nearly non existent ice pack. But this is not summer rain related. For lake mean they retrofitted the dam to operate on lower water levels, and the pipes to deliver water. What no one has done, because of climate denial in even progressive states, is to state that due to climate change lifestyle has to change.
  • nuclear? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by irlanthos ( 1040152 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:31PM (#61579415)
    didn't they just shut down a nuclear power station recently? That might have helped.
    • Maybe they could tow in some floating reactors, just for temporary use.
    • didn't they just shut down a nuclear power station recently?

      Don't know about that. But they recently ordered the shutdown (as of 2024) of their LAST nuke plant. I can't quite wish they'd keep on having power shortages, what with ordering the shutdown of all their 24/7 power generation (their privilege) but I'm close....

      • But they recently ordered the shutdown (as of 2024) of their LAST nuke plant.

        Don't know if "ordered" is the right verb here. From California's last nuclear plant is poised to shut down. What happens next? [utilitydive.com]:

        In 2018, regulators allowed Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) to close down the plant's two reactors when their licenses expire in 2024 and 2025.

        Don't know why PG&E is going that way, but it does seem silly to offline a functional carbon-free power plant. Maybe the recertification process/work required, is too onerous or other factors -- like protests about its lifespan and/or being near a fault line -- are to blame? Looks like some people are trying to stop the plant's retirement in the wake of the current/ongoing po

        • Because nuclear plants are money pits and can’t stay open without government subsidies.

        • Several of those nuclear plants have serious safety issues, and all of them have enormous operating costs. Some of them could best be described as "semi functional".

          • Several of those nuclear plants have serious safety issues, and all of them have enormous operating costs. Some of them could best be described as "semi functional".

            Sounds like Congress. :-)

      • Old style nuclear plants are not the perfect solution to power problems. They take forever to ramp up and forever to ramp down again, maintenance on them is very expensive and cannot be delayed or ignored. The owners of the power plants were the ones who requested that they be allowed to shut them down. Part of the San Onofre plant's problems came from discovering premature wear on two reactors making it unsafe to operate them, and that was the beginning of the end for that site.

        We do need more nuclear po

        • They take forever to ramp up and forever to ramp down again,
          That is not really true. They are not much slower than an old style coal plant.
          The problem is: if you ramp them down, you either have to rump them up again in relatively short timeframes, or you have to wait a very long time - days in worst case - to be able to ramp them up again.

          It is the ping pong of down and up at which they are bad.

          • In California we don't have old style coal plants, they're not really a thing out west given that all the cheap coal mines were traditionally on the east coast. Instead the fossil fuels tended to be natural gas for the most part here, and hydro is a big backbone. And hydro is indeed easy to turn a dynamo on and off as needed.

    • Re:nuclear? (Score:5, Informative)

      by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:46PM (#61579449)

      didn't they just shut down a nuclear power station recently? That might have helped.

      Leave it to someone on /. to mod that "Flamebait" (sigh) ... But, according to a quick Google search, it was 8 years ago. The two reactors at the last nuclear power plant in CA will go offline in 2024 and 2025. From California's last nuclear plant is poised to shut down. What happens next? [utilitydive.com]:

      As California's last nuclear facility — the 2.2 GW Diablo Canyon power plant — approaches its scheduled retirement date, some energy experts worry that the state hasn't fully prepared for what comes next.

      The Diablo Canyon plant is located on California's Central Coast and produces some 18,000 GWh of electricity annually — almost 10% of the state's energy portfolio. Since the closure of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station eight years ago, it has been the sole operational nuclear power facility in California. In 2018, regulators allowed Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) to close down the plant's two reactors when their licenses expire in 2024 and 2025. But as those dates draw nearer, experts are questioning what it will mean for California's reliability and greenhouse gas (GHG) emission goals.

      • As California's last nuclear facility --- the 2.2 GW Diablo Canyon power plant --- approaches its scheduled retirement date, some energy experts worry that the state hasn't fully prepared for what comes next.

        Incessant taxes, overcrowding, insane traffic, questionable leadership, the faint smell of human shit wafting over the city, and the best weather ever for welcoming massive homeless encampments in every downtown.

        I wonder what gave the energy experts a clue that this state lacks preparedness...

    • Re:nuclear? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:53PM (#61579467) Homepage Journal

      Total for hydro generation is around 14 GW, the two plants in San Onofre, CA (SONGS) that were decommissioned in 2013 were 2,350 MW combined. Maybe it would have helped a bit to keep it around. But those two stations do not completely replace the our hydro generation. SONGS is perhaps a bad example, because its life was cut short and it was decommissioned earlier than the original design intended due to damage and a contained leak. But it's also a good example of the inherent risk in nuclear power, a risk you can manage but not avoid.

      What would have helped for CA's power grid is replacing decommissioned nuclear plants with ones that produce significantly more. That's not the way of things today, especially given the difficulties we've seen in dealing with the waste and tear down of SONGS. There still is not a good strategy for decommissioning safely and cheaply, and it is still a multi-decade process. (footprint of the station is scheduled to be reduced in 2051 for example).

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The leak was part of the reason why it was shut down, the bigger issue was the steam generators. They were replaced with units that were not identical to the original ones, and they degraded fast. When the leak happened it was actually fortuitous, because without it they wouldn't have noticed the problems with the steam generators for some time.

        They tried to argue that they could run the reactor at 70% for a while to see how the generators held up but the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board said that would co

    • In the People's Republic of California, The Party leaders have been working feverishly to kill-off nuclear power and have succeeded in shuttering all but one of the state's zero-carbon-emissions nuke plants.

      It took lots of tricks to do it. For example, when environmental activists lobbied them, Dem Senators Boxer and Feinstein urged the Obama admin to not give an answer as to when the operators of the San Onofre plant could expect to get re-certified after being down for repairs and maintenance. The plant o

  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @04:32PM (#61579417)

    Wave power and offshore wind farms.

    Maybe not enough to offset hydro, but there are always waves.

    • there are always waves.

      Challenge excepted, my evil challenged friend! MUHAHAHAHAHAaaa *cough* *cough* *cough* oh this better not be covid.

    • Wave and offshore wind power costs more than nuclear fission. If the problem is rising energy costs then that is not the solution. Wind and wave power is intermittent, so if the problem is unreliable supply then this only makes things worse.

      California needs nuclear fission power. Their energy problems will remain until they build more nuclear fission power plants.

      • Wave and offshore wind power costs more than nuclear fission.
        It does not.

        Why spreading this stupid lie constantly?

        And you do not need offshore anyway: you can put them on shore - at the coast. Simple.

        California needs nuclear fission power.
        California needs two things:
        * power
        * water

        Where that comes from is their business.

        What it definitely not needs are idiots like you.

    • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

      Wave power and offshore wind farms.

      Wave or tidal power are negligibly small to be useful anywhere in CA. Offshore wind is also problematic, because there aren't many places to put the offshore turbines due to very steep dropoff.

  • Fuck "consumable vs renewables".
    IDEALLY, we want diversity in power sources.
    This way, if we run into a failure scenario for one, we have others to fall back on.
    Additionally we need to make sure the infrastructure needed to MOVE that power is both robust and redundant.

    Trying to label any one form of generation "good" or "bad" is totally missing the point, and is just going to get people killed.

  • by Randseed ( 132501 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @05:24PM (#61579577)
    They have major problems with forest fires. And of course unemployment is a concern everywhere. So what you do is grab all the unemployed people, hand then chainsaws, and go cut down the forests. Then you ship the wood to big power plants powered by wood and light it up. Two birds with one stone! There's no more forest to burn, and you still managed to meet your energy quota! What a deal! (/s for the idiots)
  • Save Diablo Canyon (Score:5, Insightful)

    by atomicalgebra ( 4566883 ) on Tuesday July 13, 2021 @05:51PM (#61579719)
    Gassy Gavin is poised to shutdown our largest source of clean energy and replace it with fossil fuels. This will drive up air pollution, air pollution deaths, greenhouse gasses, and poverty. The planned shutdown of Diablo Canyon is a crime against humanity. The plant is still young(it's technically a millennial) and is one of the best maintained plants in the world.
  • Turns out there are some drawbacks to all that "great weather" (no rain).

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