Why start now on a national smart grid....
Today’s post: Wednesday, 3-25-2009
It’s imperative that we begin work on a well run and extensive national electrical transmission grid now.
Doing a good job of this is as important to our future prosperity as the Interstate highway system was in its day.
A national electricity transmission grid is now being considered in part to help us best develop & use large and multiple locations and sources for renewable energy.
There are actually five reasons for this.:
1. Some of the best locations with the most renewable energy potential are NOT now served with electrical transmission lines.
2. Many of the best locations with the most renewable energy potential are located far from the residences and businesses that will most need their output and the transmission lines between them are not yet built.
3. With the very large numbers of small sources of renewably generated electricity we expect to develop, we need to have some way of distributing the electricity to the locations that most need them at any particular point in time. This is related to the previous point; but will also be important for smaller sources in areas that already have transmission to help balance the supply and demand between parts of the existing transmission grid that are not now connected.
4. Particularly for solar generated electricity it will be important to be able to send electricity from areas still getting plenty of sunshine to areas far away where the sun has already set and lighting is needed. Large scale solar thermal sources in the Southwestern United States and in Mexico CAN efficiently save the heat for many hours after the sun goes down to aid in this process; but we will need to add the transmission lines to those areas and be able to send electricity East across all the time zones of the United States to enhance this capacity and extend the hours of the day we can use this renewable energy in our East coast cities.
5. Some areas of the United States have more people and businesses than good locations for renewable energy.
In short, to be able to have renewable energy come as close as possible to providing all our electricity it’s imperative we have this national transmission grid.
I’ve read that some people are saying that instead of building this grid system, we should develop multiple sources of renewable energy that are already near the populations they will serve and quite close to existing transmission lines to get usable renewable energy in place soon.
What they are in favor of doing is totally and absolutely correct and desirable. To provide energy independence and cut the use of fossil fuels that emit CO2 the air can’t safely handle any more, we need exactly that very fast start and we need it immediately.
Further, if all 50 states had good feed-in tariffs in place (see last week’s post) we would already be doing just that all over the US.
But that leaves as much as 60 % of the available renewable energy undeveloped and unused if that’s ALL we do.
If we start now on the national transmission grid, in 10 to 20 years we will have this other renewable energy available. And, we cannot afford to wait longer for it if we are to stop the worsening of global warming and continue to wind down the use of fossil fuels without starving our economy for energy or running up its cost enough to cause economic slowdowns.
Last but far from least, since this is an investment that will produce positive returns, the jobs that building the national transmission grid will produce have an extra justification; but in addition to that, what makes doing this now so valuable now is that having those jobs begin to come online in the next one to three years will help reverse our current recession.
So, in my view, on practically every point, the national transmission grid is something we should begin to build immediately.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
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1 comment:
Great Blog , thanks!There has been a significant increase in investment fo smartgrid technology , it was over 3 billion in 08 and 17 billion in new stimulus money from the goverment to move remote solar and wind power to consumers, so there is good reason for optimism , even during these times!
Thanks Dunton!
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