|
ERCOT is on thin margins today: And prices are only continuing to rise: http://www.ercot.com/content/cdr/html/real_time_spp You can refresh the fastest here to follow along: http://www.ercot.com/content/cdr/html/real_time_system_conditions.html
|
# ? Sep 6, 2019 19:53 |
|
|
# ? May 11, 2024 09:43 |
|
Heck Yes! Loam! posted:Let it go to waste as we don't have any way to store it . Use the overcapacity to produce liquid fuels, use fuels to run peaker/overnight plants, boom there's your grid storage.
|
# ? Sep 6, 2019 20:26 |
|
$1,780 per MWh and climbing. Enron eat your heart out!
|
# ? Sep 6, 2019 21:13 |
|
Trabisnikof posted:$1,780 per MWh and climbing. Enron eat your heart out! What the gently caress is going on. Are those peak demand prices on Texas? Edit: after doing some reading it appears Texas is in the midst of a heat wave, and they are closingin on capacity leading to huge surge pricing. Ercot is encouraging people to conserve, but it isn't helping. Prices hit 900$+ yesterday and people freaked. It's twice that today . Heck Yes! Loam! fucked around with this message at 21:24 on Sep 6, 2019 |
# ? Sep 6, 2019 21:15 |
|
http://www.ercot.com/content/cdr/html/CURRENT_DAYCOP_HSL.html Shows the current wind forecast. Texas is currently in the mid day valley of wind speeds. And I bet some generation stations have started their fall outages, further constraining the market. So you get all the small old combustion turbines that are bid into the market at super high prices.
|
# ? Sep 6, 2019 21:29 |
|
didn't even hear about this until now lol https://twitter.com/ERCOT_ISO/status/1169997692585598979 https://twitter.com/ERCOT_ISO/status/1170108214454706176 we did it guys
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 00:06 |
|
GreyjoyBastard posted:didn't even hear about this until now lol I worked with a military base in Texas where a significant portion of their energy budget was due to their ability to predict periods like this with insanely high demand, and then run the large base generators for a couple hours to reduce base demand significantly since their rates are dependent on usage during times of peak demand. So if the utility treats them as a client with a peak demand of a few hundred kVA rather than a dozen MVA, that's hundreds of thousands of dollars saved for the base energy manager. So what I'm saying is nationalize the goddamn energy industry thxu
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 00:26 |
|
GreyjoyBastard posted:didn't even hear about this until now lol Fun fact, “public appeals” to conserve energy like that are usually pretty far into emergency procedures. The next steps are usually voltage reduction, and cutting non-firm demand (usually special rate large energy customers), then finally starting the rolling blackouts.
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 00:46 |
|
lol if they think anyone is going to let their house heat up to save someone else money That’s a sucker move. If they turn the thermostat up and there’s a blackout anyway, the house will reach sweltering temperatures more quickly than if it started at a cool & comfortable temperature..
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 06:19 |
|
Heck Yes! Loam! posted:Let it go to waste as we don't have any way to store it . Actually, I can think of something we could do to store the energy from over capacity easy. Make gasoline with it. Massive overcapacity of power generation is something we need, no matter if we go with solar, wind, nuclear, or whatever your green power source of choice is. (I think in 2050 we can get the microwave power station and as long as we keep disasters off it would be great.)
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 09:55 |
|
There are like a billion good uses for excess energy
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 10:26 |
|
I mean, I know it's a sci fi cliche and all, but energy is really the limiting factor on anything you'd want to do. Want to run chemical plants to pull CO2 out of the air? You need energy. Run lines to bulldozers and cranes and build your wind turbines during peak solar output, and massively cut the carbon cost of each turbine by probably 80%. The problem is we have a high energy society that hasn't been paying the full cost of our energy use because we use sources who's bad externalities fall well into someone elses or the future's problem. If were going to beat climate change then we'll have to change that, and that means providing society with A LOT of green electrical energy.
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 11:35 |
|
Killer-of-Lawyers posted:Actually, I can think of something we could do to store the energy from over capacity easy. Make gasoline with it. Nah man, Microwave Power happens 2020 +/- 10 years in game and Fusion Power happens 2050 +/- 10 years.
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 18:38 |
|
Clearly the best option is to make giant hill covered with water tiles for hydroelectric during map generation.
|
# ? Sep 7, 2019 22:30 |
|
QuarkJets posted:There are like a billion good uses for excess energy It would be interesting to run desalination plants with excess solar, then use that water in reforestation programs, especially where desertification is a significant issue. It would be a much better use of bullshit oil money then funding Silicon Valley.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 01:04 |
|
Massive desalination to irrigate the outback to grow eucalyptus trees is one of the ideas that got floated around for reversing climate change. I suppose it comes down to how much it costs to industrially take the CO2 out vs desalinating and pumping water into aird land. BrandorKP posted:Clearly the best option is to make giant hill covered with water tiles for hydroelectric during map generation. I mean, you can always just put your industry in a corner of the map so it's not simulated. Hmm. I may have fallen for the very same trap in Sim City as Humanity did.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 01:41 |
|
Killer-of-Lawyers posted:I mean, you can always just put your industry in a corner of the map so it's not simulated. This is funny. drat. That's almost better than "fever" climate change analogy.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 05:58 |
|
Killer-of-Lawyers posted:Massive desalination to irrigate the outback to grow eucalyptus trees is one of the ideas that got floated around for reversing climate change. I spent nearly a year in AmeriCorps helping to run a native plant nursery and restore salmon stream habitat in the PNW and if folks actually give a gently caress it’s a model that can work. Our main nursery was maybe 2-3 acres and we had several municipal sites from which we were able to periodically harvest stuff like willow. It worked year around because the times we weren’t planting we were tending other sites and it’s easier when you are literally planting acres and acres of plants just to fill space. Things get even easier if you pick a tree species that propagates trivially, like the way quaking aspen does.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 06:44 |
|
Yeah, reforestation efforts can do a lot. We'd need some of the major powers to buy in, but we could sell it as a jobs program in that respect.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 13:11 |
|
Farmer Crack-rear end posted:Use the overcapacity to produce liquid fuels, use fuels to run peaker/overnight plants, boom there's your grid storage. This, 100 percent. I read about a pilot project to crack hydrogen when there was spare electricity, and then run a fuel cell with it when more power was needed. Unfortunately, it got defunded. You could do other things with otherwise excess electricity, too. Like provide energy to projects like this? OK, a question: when it comes to Grid storage, has anybody tried flywheels like, really big flywheels
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 17:17 |
|
Nebakenezzer posted:OK, a question: when it comes to Grid storage, has anybody tried flywheels I cannot wait for the results of that failure mode.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 17:32 |
|
CommieGIR posted:I cannot wait for the results of that failure mode. what if grapeshot but real big
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 17:37 |
|
CommieGIR posted:I cannot wait for the results of that failure mode. They’re also used in race cars.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 18:01 |
|
CommieGIR posted:I cannot wait for the results of that failure mode. listen all it is is a cylinder, the size and mass of a ship, spinning at supersonic speeds in a vacuum pressure vessel
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 18:06 |
|
Acceleration with a fly wheel would be why I'd think.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 18:06 |
|
Environmentalists in Germany are literally insane. Another article on how good intentions aren't actually helping: https://www.forbes.com/sites/michae...t/#1ec0477c8e48 quote:Despite much hype, Germany still generates just 35% of its electricity from renewables. And if biomass burning, often dirtier than coal, is excluded, wind, water and solar electricity in Germany accounted for just 27% of electricity generation in 2018. What the gently caress, Greens?
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 19:11 |
|
Solkanar512 posted:They’re also used in race cars. They are used in most engines. And yeah, the Hybrids have speciality flywheels. They love storing energy and then, when a mechanical failure happens, escaping.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 19:17 |
|
Phanatic posted:
why?
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 19:17 |
|
Phanatic posted:Environmentalists in Germany are literally insane. German environmentalists seem to have some pretty hosed up priorities. Frankly they seem indistinguishable from the coal lobbyists at times.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 19:23 |
|
Remember there are a lot of village type environmentalists, who want us to go to a pastoral lifestyle of small 5k or so villages that we navigate with bicycles. Of course, this would involve the death of a lot of the population to make it work, but that usually doesn't come up with them. But given that local communities also were involved, it's probably just NIMBY. Power Lines are ugly and bring down property values.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 19:24 |
|
Killer-of-Lawyers posted:Of course, this would involve the death of a lot of the population to make it work... Germans love tradition.
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 19:25 |
|
Dante80 posted:why? https://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/25/world/europe/germans-balk-at-plan-for-wind-power-lines.html quote:But citizens living in the areas proposed for the half-mile-wide transmission lines say they worry that the magnetic fields from the lines could harm their health. (So far, most scientific studies have not found a significant threat. In 2006, the World Health Organization said static electric and magnetic fields had no adverse health impact, but public fears persist.) Standard FYGM mentality. "This will effect me personally so I'm going to stoke irrational fears in the populace at large in order benefit me."
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 19:26 |
|
CommieGIR posted:They are used in most engines. And yeah, the Hybrids have speciality flywheels. I swear there was a discussion a while ago about just this concept, putting spinning death wheels in every basement to serve the dual purpose of energy storage and stochastic population control
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 20:17 |
|
Nebakenezzer posted:OK, a question: when it comes to Grid storage, has anybody tried flywheels yes, they've been doing frequency regulation in nyiso since 2009ish there were no follow up orders and the company went silent for a few years and then got "acquired", so I don't think it went well https://beaconpower.com/modular-design/
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 20:20 |
|
Phanatic posted:Environmentalists in Germany are literally insane. I'm repeating this for the nth time but German environmentalists are a mix of * NIMBYs * People who read a sad facebook post about some environmental disaster killing animals so now they get angry at people in general * People who used to think of themselves as free and alternative but now work for an insurance company and have a house to get all NIMBY about * People who think we can live off the land in harmony with nature, without chemicals and plastics and visible structures larger than a single family home (driving 3 SUVs is ok though because one of them is a hybrid) * People who are real conservative but think of the view from their hillside home as part of the national heritage which they get all NIMBY about * People who are scared of electrons and bad magnetic vibrations now that Germany has banned the atoms and genes they used to be scared of * Have I mentioned NIMBYs There are reality based environmentalists in local and national conservation organisations but these groups have largely focused on protecting specific species and habitats from clearly identifiable threats. They have no clue about how to make a practical plan for stopping climate change, much less how to restructure society to maintain acceptable living standards and large scale functioning ecosystems at the same time, and in some cases see climate change as a distraction from more immediate issues. suck my woke dick fucked around with this message at 20:23 on Sep 8, 2019 |
# ? Sep 8, 2019 20:20 |
Phanatic posted:Environmentalists in Germany are literally insane. A reminder that Germany is the country that shut down their entire nuclear grid as a reaction to Fukushima, and as you can see they still haven't recovered.
|
|
# ? Sep 8, 2019 20:50 |
|
yea we definitely need a reminder of that every 15 or 20 posts
|
# ? Sep 9, 2019 00:56 |
|
StabbinHobo posted:yea we definitely need a reminder of that every 15 or 20 posts It bears repeating because even if we assume that 100% renewables on the back of a simultaneous nuclear and coal shutdown could be made to work for Germany, German greens are such an incompetent mess they'll torpedo their own attempt to save the planet over property values and unwillingness to do large scale planning.
|
# ? Sep 9, 2019 01:03 |
StabbinHobo posted:yea we definitely need a reminder of that every 15 or 20 posts Lol go away
|
|
# ? Sep 9, 2019 04:53 |
|
|
# ? May 11, 2024 09:43 |
|
StabbinHobo posted:yea we definitely need a reminder of that every 15 or 20 posts Actual we do, because people like you keep coming into the thread making the same stupid anti-nuclear arguments that they do. People like you are literally the reason we can't combat climate change. We've had all the solutions for decades, we just can't use them because morons keep loving it up over irrational fears that they refuse let go of when shown proof that they're baseless.
|
# ? Sep 9, 2019 05:49 |