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Friday, February 29, 2008

Dark days ahead?

Here is the latest post on "Speaking Freely," the news commentary feature at www.TexasPolicy.com. (For those you who are more blog-savvy, we have added an RSS feed to that.)

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Reuters reports that “a drop in wind generation late on Tuesday, coupled with colder weather, triggered an electric emergency that caused the Texas grid operator to cut service to some large customers.” ERCOT, which operates the state’s power grid, moved directly to a stage 2 emergency.

Over the course of three hours, the megawatts of electricity coming from West Texas wind farms dropped from 1700 to 300. Other power suppliers fell short of their scheduled production.

Texas is now the nation’s leading generator of electricity from wind power, and the amount of wind generation is increasing. Consider what a problem this would be the next time if it were to happen on a hot summer evening when electricity use hits its peak. The more wind energy on the power grid, the more unreliability becomes a problem.

The cost of building those lines so far away from where the electricity is needed will almost certainly be borne by Texas consumers, while the wind energy investors, landowners, and West Texas taxing entities reap the financial benefits.

Wind energy has its place in the generation mix, but there is a problem with the state mandating the use of an unreliable resource and forcing consumers to subsidize it.

- Bill Peacock

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1 Comments:

Blogger Tom Gray said...

Everyone who uses electricity benefits when electricity is generated. It's also important to note that when the wind stops blowing and wind farm electricity generation drops, the process usually takes hours. By contrast, other power plants may go out of service instantaneously when a problem occurs. Wind forecasting, which could have helped address the ERCOT situation, can and is being used by utility system operators to manage wind on their systems, and will become standard practice as the use of this clean, renewable energy source continues to grow.

Regards,
Thomas O. Gray
American Wind Energy Association
www.powerofwind.org
www.awea.org

9:46 AM  

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