grid reliability
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Work now, benefit later: The energy transition will be stored for the future
Long duration energy storage, much like the federal government’s efforts to boost it, is about doing the work now and reaping the benefits later.
Battery storage expands in Texas as power grid struggles with record heat
Texas is a look into the future of driving
Study: Microgrids could reduce California power shutoffs—to a point
Researchers report that isolated grids that produce their own power could support communities when the electricity goes out. But that reliability comes at a cost.
Extreme heat is already straining the Mexican power grid
Climate change is making scorching temperatures more common in the country, which last week surpassed the peak energy demand of 2022.
A grid collapse would make a heat wave far deadlier
Heat kills an estimated 12,000 people each year in the U.S. alone. Thus far the stability of a sometimes-strained U.S. power grid has saved most of the population during extreme heat events but some emergency planners are scrambling to prepare for the unthinkable and adopt a heat action plan that can adapt to an uncertain future and an overburdened power grid.
Key quote:
“There are specific things you can do in advance of a heat wave to prepare, and then there are things you do that are all-hazards preparedness, which make you more resilient,” says Jeremy Hess, a professor of emergency medicine at the University of Washington who researches the impact of climate change on health care. “Because when things fail, they often don’t fail in quite the ways you expect.”
Big picture:
A disproportionate share of heat-related illness and death falls on disadvantaged people. Low-income neighborhoods with diminished tree canopies and a higher percentage of homes and apartments with little or no air conditioning are the first to suffer, while those able to stay cool can better manage. Emergency planners are coming to grips what it would mean to have a grid failure during extreme heat. Grid operators voice confidence with operations and the business of keeping the AC on as long as there is no physical damage. But energy infrastructure damage — say from wildfire, extreme storms, floods and the like, could shut things down for multiple days.
Read the story here at Wired Magazine.
Solar helps Texas carry energy load as heatwave puts power grid to test
State has managed to avoid rolling blackouts amid three-digit temperatures thanks to its supply of solar power, experts say.