I’ll note that right now, this is a seasonal issue, associated with moderate springtime temperatures when there is a lot of sunshine available.

  • @[email protected]
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    241 year ago

    Someone should show this to that guy in Texas who was complaining about the 8 minutes of power generation solar loses every few decades during an eclipse.

  • Hello_there
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    51 year ago

    Let’s make a cheap battery.
    Connect pump to body of water. Pump up when electricity is cheap. Let water run thru turbine when electricity is expensive.

  • @[email protected]
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    201 year ago

    article:

    “california is having this problem because solar grew faster than we expected but we are building storage systems to hold power for later.”

    commenters who didn’t read the article:

    “this is so stupid why don’t they just build storage systems to hold power for later 😡😡😡”

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      You know it may speak poorly on the commentors, but you have to some faith in humanity restored when the common sense solution is what is already in the works, right?

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        absolutely a fair point.

        my only fear is that maybe ppl may come away from this post with some kind of disdain for california, like they are “doing it wrong” or something just because they are encountering growing pains. unsure how big of a problem that is so i’m not going too hard on commenters.

        just wish more people read stuff before chucking their opinions in the ring.

  • dumples
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    61 year ago

    Battery power and transferring power across the entire nation. When is sunny one place it’s not sunny elsewhere. As things get connected together this is useful. We can all use cheap as free electricity

    • HeartyBeast
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      31 year ago

      … and domestic batteries to grab that lovely more-than free energy

        • HeartyBeast
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          21 year ago

          I have batteries that I use for my solar - but here in the UK electricity pricing frequently goes negative in the winter at night to due to a surplus of wind power. a few simple automations make sure when that happens my batteries start charging and my electric water tank heater turns on. My energy company now has a scheme where they will do it all for you if you opt in - automagically getting your batteries to charge when it makes financial sense for you.

  • @[email protected]
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    371 year ago

    This is only a problem because of money. Maybe California should install some power storage centers in order to hold the excess for later.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      if you had read the article, you’d know that they are.

      To cope, CAISO is selling some excess power to nearby states; California is also planning to install additional storage and batteries to hold solar power until later in the afternoon.

      don’t just read the headlines y’all. not a good look.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Yeah, sorry I missed that single sentence in the article that is so plastered with ads that my phone has trouble displaying the page. I’ll be sure to do better next time.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            The site is serious crap on mobile. Between all the poppins and the ads reloading to make it jump around as you read. It’s damn hard to read a full article on a lot of these news sites.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              cool. still not really an excuse to make an uninformed comment. get an ad blocker or a browser with a reader mode before spreading misinformation like that lol.

              • @[email protected]
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                31 year ago

                I mean, it’s a pretty good excuse. The sites job is to inform people and they do a shit job of it. I’m literally checking lemmy on my phone while taking a break so when some link leads to a site that’s damn near unreadable I’m not spending my entire break futzing with settings to make it readable. Like I said, I’ll do better next time.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  oops sorry i read “i’ll do better next time” as sarcasm at first. that’s on me, totally my fault.

                  idk what app you use but Voyager has a setting that lets me open all links in reader mode. i believe other apps i have tried also have this option. and adblock plus works great 👍

    • @[email protected]OP
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      141 year ago

      There’s already some storage: its the #1 source of electricity during the evening peak, but realistically, we’re going to want enough renewables that we sometimes see curtailment

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      I’m hoping to one day install some solar, and looking forward to setting up non-battery “storage” — e.g., electric water heater that turns on when there’s an excess of power, deep freezer that gets as cold as possible when there’s excess power, that sort of thing. It seems thermodynamics is the relevant discipline for these sorts of “storage” methods :)

      As an aside — while smart devices are much maligned, some rudimentary smart features for matching consumption seems like a pretty good idea. (If I ever get around to this stuff it’ll be local control via HomeAssistant.)

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Im a fan of gravity based energy storage. Excess energy is used to raise a weight up a slope and it can be reclaimed when the weight is released.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Absolutely! Living in a city, this gets a bit tricky though. But if I had a giant reservoir on a hill…and another one below it…

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          There is a reason why energy based energy storage is not more developed right now (with the exception of Pumped-storage hydroelectricity). It’s not very dense at all.

          A 15 tons block of concrete that goes up 100m can only store 4kwh of energy. A 4.5kwh battery cost around 1600€.

          Gravity based energy storage seem simple and elegant at first but you go into the details you realized that is far far les efficient than regular chemical battery. Unfortunately.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        Why would you convert electricity into thermal work then back again? Why not consider old school batteries? You’re already taking up space and infrastructure

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      The only problem is they need more of it. Some cost needs to be put onto solar to fix the grid. It needs upgrading because solar is making more work for the grid.

      Solar is absoultely good, but it doesn’t come without costs to the grid and that money needs to be raised to upgrade it.

  • @[email protected]
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    141 year ago

    California could provide credits for people to install in-home batteries. That could level out the wild swings in supply and demand, while letting people enjoy continuous, cheap power.

    Add a car charger transformer and a lot of EV demand on the grid can be handled by in-home batteries.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    People don’t seem to have read the article or seem to understand anything at all.

    “These are not insurmountable challenges,” said Michelle Davis, head of global solar at the energy research and consulting firm Wood Mackenzie Power and Renewables. “But they are challenges that a lot of grid operators have never had to deal with.”

    And

    Solar can still grow in California. In the summer, when high air conditioning use strains the grid, solar can be useful even in the middle of the day. Denholm says that as solar continues to drop in price, installing solar that is curtailed regularly can still be cost-effective. “Throwing away some amount of renewable energy can absolutely make economic sense,” he said.

    People want to eat their cake and have it too. The grid is old as fuck and is built for a easy system where plants can reliably come online and run all day. They have inertia and can balance the grid. The value of a traditional plant is higher than that of a solar plant. Solar absolutely has additional costs to the grid and that shouldn’t be ignored. So the only way for solar to compete is to be cheaper, which it is. But those added costs need to be recouped for investment. That’s all that the article is saying.

    This amout of solar is absoultely causing the grid problems that no grid in the world has ever seen before solar became a thing. But it can be fixed, it just takes investment.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      on the internet everyone is their own expert and reading is below oneself. i get all my opinions from the headlines and the top two upvoted snarky comments ✨🧚‍♀️

  • HubertManne
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    231 year ago

    texas needed power and im sure they are connected to the national grid…wait

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    Clearly under a capitalist vision “””smart”””appliances like your dish washer could be set to run at some point in the next X hours, and they would optimally wait until there was a local excess of solar energy in the grid to run. What would make the device “smart” is just that your device would be watching the price of electricity and have some basic rules of how long to wait before needing to run no matter what (you need your clothes clean by tomorrow).

    I don’t know if that is the future I am most confident in being the best, but clearly this is VERY possible with current technology it just takes the structuring of appliance companies and software in a way that makes this not impossible for dizzyingly insane reasons.

    Also, here’s an idea, use the spare electricity to charge public bicycles and put a free amount of power into them so the next random person who uses them gets a subsidized ride? Like why not have some kind of publicly owned power bank in the vicinity of surplus alternative energy sources that is known to occasionally have a lot of very cheap power that could be used to power cars, power banks or other large batteries?

    Surely people are doing this right??? Right??

    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      This is exactly what Octopus Energy are doing in the UK. You tell them when you need your car charged by and they schedule it to happen (usually overnight) so that it’s done by then.

      Rather than laying 30p/kwh you pay 7p/kwh.

      You can of course tell it to just charge, and pay the usual rate.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Yes, and some people on Octopus Agile have been seeing negative electricity prices as consumers recently, although that was due to high winds hitting the offshore farms rather than solar.

        The App for my Bosch washing machine does have links to a couple of proprietary ‘smart home’ solutions that can synchronise start times with solar output, but none of them are compatible with my other kit so I never looked further. It does also support IFTTT so I guess I could set something up myself if I had the skill.
        Start times are better than nothing, but what would really be useful is the ability to modulate the heater output to say 1 or 0.5kW over a longer period if there’s thin clouds reducing the output from the inverter. Also cross talk between appliances that allows you to turn them all on at once, and they can introduce pauses in their programmes, so they don’t overlap high power tasks.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I do think that this is a good solution. Not the best, but yeah, when there’s an excess of electricity automatically using it for tasks that aren’t time dependent is wonderful

  • @[email protected]
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    261 year ago

    Selling the power to other regions is alright, but what I’d really like to see is pumped storage. Even just two grey water reservoirs- massive, probably underground. “Spend” all that free electricity during the solar day. Release that energy as hydropower during the mornings and evenings to reduce surge pricing and demand on the grid. Sell additional power as needed, but don’t let solar go to waste.

    Batteries are…okay… but lithium ion cells will last 10 or 15 years before needing to be replaced, which seems wasteful when we have perfectly reusable options like pumped storage, which involves a few pumps, a hydroelectric turbine, and two cement or dirt reservoirs, one higher than the other.

    I’m sure whatever we do, it will fix itself in time. I just hope CA doesn’t permanently cut incentives over this “problem”, haha.

  • @[email protected]
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    1111 year ago

    Oh no! Not an excess of available power! How will the state ever recover from such a catastrophe?

    • The Uncanny Observer
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      61 year ago

      I’m not familiar with how power grids work, is an excess of power bad for the grid if it isn’t used?

      • @[email protected]
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        511 year ago

        No. They constantly monitor it and keep it in line. The power grid itself is totally fine. Completely.

        The only “problem” is they cannot easily turn on or off huge old power plants, so if the sun is blazing, they might have to direct excess old generation power to batteries or other grids.

        The only “problem” is the power companies don’t get to charge much for simply managing the grid. They charge mostly for power generation, so it ends up costing them money. If they were simply a government paid service, they wouldn’t have to care what so ever which direction power is flowing as long as it has somewhere to go.

        • ReallyKinda
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          151 year ago

          The main power company in CA (PG&E) has built tons of other things into the bills aside from power generation, so I expect my bill (which has gone up 300% since 2018) to continue to climb despite this.

          • @[email protected]
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            61 year ago

            Seriously, i found an old bill from a decade ago, it was like $54 for my 1 BR apartment. It’s now usually over triple that…

          • ares35
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            1 year ago

            my utility charges $25 a month just to be hooked up. then there’s taxes and some community bullshit fees on top of the actual electricity usage. so even though my usage has dropped quite a bit over the years, and the base rate hasn’t really gone up that much (about 10-12% total, over two decades)… my bill is still more than double what it used to be.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            PG&E charges me more to deliver power ($0.18/kWh) than it does to generate ($0.12/kWh) that power. That’s f’ed up.

        • TWeaK
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          51 year ago

          They keep it in line by curtailing or switching off generation. The generator typically still gets paid as if it were generating whatever it has available, which is perhaps an issue, but the total generation is reduced to meet the demand.

          This is why there is negative pricing, it’s cheaper to sell electricity in the negative than to pay a generator to be offline.

          They can’t direct excess generation to batteries if the batteries aren’t there yet. They’re being installed, but the overall capacity is still relatively low. Transferring it to other grids also has limits, and in particular if there’s an excess of solar in one region the neighbouring regions also probably have an excess, so there really is no other option but to curtail.

          • @[email protected]
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            61 year ago

            Jeeze it almost seems like the 21st century might take some sort of smart grid, and having a bunch of big dumb plants that cannot be turned on and off without great expense should be a relic of the past!

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              There is a cost to that. Everyone complains about that.

              That’s why for example China are building new coal plants. The new ones turn on and off quicker.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            “Batteries” don’t need to be what we commonly think of as storing electricity. They can very much be a different way of storing energy instead. For instance, pumping water up to a tower (or upstream), or splitting water into hydrogen + oxygen (for consumption/combustion later)

            • TWeaK
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              1 year ago

              Yes I’m aware of water storage, and even quite fond of it, but it’s very dependent on geography (as you need a very large body of water so you can’t really just use a water tower) and also incredibly expensive. There are generally more effective and profitable uses for land.

              Meanwhile BESS is tiny, something like 30MW per acre.

              Storing energy as hydrogen is a fool’s errand, in fact many of the new use cases for hydrogen are snake oil touted by people looking to sell more hydrogen. Even ignoring the fact that hydrogen leaks through and embrittles any container it’s stored in (or that it explodes violently), converting hydrogen to electricity only leaves you about 70% of the energy you put in.

      • @[email protected]
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        101 year ago

        Kind of, yeah. But excess solar can be turned off almost instantly so it isn’t like it’s an impossible problem.

        • The Uncanny Observer
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          51 year ago

          Sorry for asking all these questions, but how do you turn off solar? Doesn’t it keep generating while there’s sunlight?

          • @[email protected]
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            141 year ago

            If it’s turned off, it’s like a battery that isn’t connected to anything. You have a voltage across the positive and negative terminals, but power can’t actually flow unless there’s somewhere for it to go.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        Yeah, various power generation techniques (e.g., big industrial power plants) do not want to run without a load. And switching them off temporarily isn’t really feasible (shutting them for good would ultimately be nice, but that’s another topic…).

        And you can’t just “dump” huge amounts of excess of power — it needs to go somewhere.

    • @[email protected]
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      331 year ago

      I hope it doesn’t spill into the water, permeate the air, or leave the land uninhabitable for thousands of years.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        It’s existence highlights the need for more, and more distributed storage. That’s a good discussion to be having

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Relatively easy tech is temporary hydrogen storage. Of course hydrogen has poorer efficiency than batteries, but if all batteries are full, excess energy could be converted to hydrogen, stored, and converted back to electricity when no solar is available, and batteries are empty. Efficiency roundtrip with current tech is roughly 70%.

  • @[email protected]
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    251 year ago

    I’ve got a pretty easy fix, just pass those negative rates on to the consumer. I’d be happy to teach my car to charge when the price goes negative, but noooo, utilities are the ones double dipping on negative power rates.

    • @[email protected]
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      151 year ago

      In Finland that’s what we do (if you have a ‘market priced’ contract). I have my heating set up so that it will ‘overheat’ my apartment when power is very cheap, effectively using the interior space as a rudimentary thermal battery.

      There was an incident a few months ago, that caused power price to became absurdly negative, someone made a wrong bid and people used 90M€ worth of power in a few hours as a result.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Allow the free market to behave like it’s supposed to when it benefits the little guys? You must be joking, we don’t do that here.

  • @[email protected]
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    17 days ago

    IDK guys, I feel like the solution is pretty obvious. Just tell the utilities to turn on a crypto or GenAI farm to soak up the excess free power. Voilà, problem solved and Value™ created for shareholders. Win win!

    • @[email protected]OP
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      17 days ago

      The problem with things like crypto and genAI is that they’re capital-intensive, which makes little sense for something that’s only available as excess for part of the day on a seasonal basis.

      Storage has the same problem, though it does a lot more for people.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 days ago

      I non ironically think that a state that provides zero-cost electricity during its solar spike is going to attract a lot of companies whose productivity rely on cheap electricity, including, yes, AI training centers.