From cfact
The president said he wanted to stop new wind energy development from damaging the U.S. power grid. There is an easy and wise way to stop solar energy as well. Just prohibit hooking these destructive intermittent generators into the grid.
States have the right to build generators, but approval of links to the U.S. power grid is a federal function. The chief agency is the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) of the Ministry of Energy. The agency was delegated to the Regional Transmission Operator (RTO) supervised by the FERC.
The current situation is ridiculous because the RTO's renewable energy developers' queue of connection requests exceeded their peak demand in total. The unpredictable intermittent generated in these renewable sources can damage the grid.
FERC has the right and responsibility to prohibit intermittent generations from contacting. They have just approved a proposal from a regional transmission operator to prioritize the approval of the dispatchable generator connection to the intermittent generator.
Schedulable means that the generator can generate electricity when needed. Wind and solar energy can’t do this because they only generate power when the wind blows, and it’s sunny. This unpredictable dependence on weather is called intermittent. The difference between daily, hourly, or even minute can be very large. This endless change can easily unstable the grid in a way that fluctuates from destructive voltage and frequency to fatal power outages.
For FERC, it is an easy step to get it from priority generation to demanding it by not approving the connection of a destructive intermittent generator.
The FERC’s mission statement is clear:
“FERC ensures that consumers are provided with reliable, safe, safe and economical energy at reasonable costs.”
FERC does have two good reasons to prohibit new intermittent connections – reliability and cost. Intermittently damaged the grid and spent a lot of money. In theory, storage can solve this problem, but it cannot be expensive. There is no feasible intermittent treatment.
Intermittent costs are expensive because distributable generation must be continuously run when renewable energy is insufficient. When only one-time systems can do the job, Americans end up paying for both power generation systems. Adding intermittent is a wasteful and expensive redundancy.
However, renewable energy instability is much more expensive than this redundancy. Such as computers and internet data centers are at the heart of our lifestyle and require high-quality electricity. Even small changes in AC frequency or voltage can destroy them.
Computers now operate many of our basic systems and equipment, making them highly sensitive to power quality. Losing the entire system can be catastrophic.
There are increasing warnings, as the US grid becomes unstable due to unwise replacement of dispatchable generators with intermittent generators. This trend cannot continue and FERC reversed this trend.
Some states have laws that require that the transition to intermittent renewable energy is irrelevant. The responsibility of the FERC is to the American people, not to conceive state laws. Reliable electricity at reasonable costs is crucial to the United States. Must be restored.
Throughout the 20th century, electricity consumption has grown steadily. This steady growth suddenly stopped at the turn of the century, but now it has returned to strong growth. Much of the new demand is for high-quality electricity, intermittent generations are impossible. It is necessary to stop adding destructive intermittent generations to the grid until reliability is restored and many new adjustable generations are obtained.
FERC must act quickly to restore reliability. The first step for FERC is to ban the connection that connects the new generation to the US grid.
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