Some of the most reliable utilities are in the heartland states of Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, the Dakotas, Nebraska and Kansas.So let's not increase the supply, let's spend gigabucks spreading the (no trans-fats!) margarine a little thinner on the Wonder Bread.
In those states, the power is out an average of only 92 minutes per year, according to a 2008 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory study. On the other end of the spectrum, utilities in New York Pennsylvania and New Jersey averaged 214 minutes of total interruptions each year. These figures don't include power outages blamed on tornadoes or other disasters.
Here in my little patch of nowhere the countryside is dotted with powerplants, more-or-less one per town. On cool mornings I can see steam plumes from at least three on the horizon. It's good to decentralize, I suppose, because the one that serves the small town nearest me is famously falling to pieces. A few years ago a couple of local guys were nearly squashed when a major portion fell off. It's the biggest employer in town, the tail sort of wagging the dog, and considering how much effort the utility company that owns it spends just keeping the poor ancient thing running it's hard to believe they're really making any money on it. They can't build any new ones, of course. These are coal-fired, grandfathered in under weighty layers of regulation, and the cost of new ones - shudder.
Connect that to a national "smart grid," so New York and Jersey City can last a few more weeks? I wouldn't be looking at steam plumes, I'd be watching smoke columns as the poor things burned themselves down.
As far as I can tell, letting the great national infrastructure built by earlier generations just fall into the dust till we're all reading the Prophetess Ayn Rand by tallow lamps is the plan. Maybe Utopia will only come when nobody can still read.
It's gonna be really ironic if I'm the only one left with a functioning toaster within my lifetime...
3 comments:
There was a power plant building boom in the late 90's/early 00's. Just around here they built three combined cycle gas turbine plants. The plant nearest me just installed two gas turbine/boiler combos to replace their old boiler, and raise their output in the process. It's not so much a lack of plants, it's the transmission grid that's been neglected for far too long. Seems the ROI is a lot lower for transmission upgrades than for new plants. The "smart grid" is a bandaid for lack of investment in transmission more than anything. BTW, I used to be a control room operator in a combined cycle plant, so I know what I'm talking about...
I'll freely concede that you know more about it than I do, but that's not the way it looks from here. Or from Kali, which was where I lived before coming here. Wherever the building boom happened, I sure missed it.
Not saying you're wrong, just not seeing it.
Here in Colorado they have passed the "Clean air clean jobs act" Better known as the clean air no jobs act. The coal fired power plant I work in will be forced to stop using cheap coal to make electricity. They will use natural gas instead. Half of the jobs in the plant will go away and the electrical rates will go up.
These old coal plants were built in the 40's and are falling apart.Just had a large transformer blow up near downtown Denver, due to age. Wyomiles
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