benbo
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Ran across this little snippet in a Cal Energy publication, and it reminded me of some of the old wind power discussions on EB -
"More Wind Means More Expensive
Peakers, Study Finds
As intermittent energy such as wind spreads, the
grid will need to rely on more-expensive thermal generation
such as natural gas peakers to meet demand
not met by renewables, according to a February 2010
paper from James Bushnell, director of the UC Energy
Institute.
What’s more, adding large amounts of wind won’t
reduce the need for thermal generation by that much.
The paper looked at what electricity load would
have looked like during 2007, under various levels
of wind penetration. Bushnell, also a member of
Cal-ISO’s Market Surveillance Committee, found that
large investments in wind only modestly reduce the
need for thermal generation. In California, going from
no wind to more than 11 GW reduces the need for fossil-
fuel power only by 1,200 MW—from 20,810 MW
to 19,561 MW.
The results were the same in the Northwest Power
Pool, the Arizona-New Mexico area, and the Rocky
Mountain Power Pool—“the reduction in thermal
capacity averages only about 15 percent of the new
installed wind capacity,” Bushnell found."
"More Wind Means More Expensive
Peakers, Study Finds
As intermittent energy such as wind spreads, the
grid will need to rely on more-expensive thermal generation
such as natural gas peakers to meet demand
not met by renewables, according to a February 2010
paper from James Bushnell, director of the UC Energy
Institute.
What’s more, adding large amounts of wind won’t
reduce the need for thermal generation by that much.
The paper looked at what electricity load would
have looked like during 2007, under various levels
of wind penetration. Bushnell, also a member of
Cal-ISO’s Market Surveillance Committee, found that
large investments in wind only modestly reduce the
need for thermal generation. In California, going from
no wind to more than 11 GW reduces the need for fossil-
fuel power only by 1,200 MW—from 20,810 MW
to 19,561 MW.
The results were the same in the Northwest Power
Pool, the Arizona-New Mexico area, and the Rocky
Mountain Power Pool—“the reduction in thermal
capacity averages only about 15 percent of the new
installed wind capacity,” Bushnell found."
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