Posted on 07/03/2012 4:53:42 PM PDT by joeclarke
"As utility companies face new deadlines for coal-fired power plants to comply with tight new EPA clean air regulations, many energy suppliers have plans to shutter plants that employ thousands of IBEW members rather than invest in costly upgrades.
If thousands of megawatts are suddenly taken off-line, this could trigger massive electricity shortages, just as demand is expected to increase, according to a regional transmission organization report.
A report from PJM, a regional transmission organization covering 13 states and the District of Columbia, estimates that 18,000 megawatts of electricity will be lost to the power grid due to expected coal plant shutdowns. That's the loss of enough power to light and heat 18 million homes."
'The Cross-State Air Pollution Rule has received nothing but negative feedback from the affected energy industry, which argues the stricter federal emission law will result in higher costs for electricity and massive loss of U.S. jobs. The plan will also require billions of dollars to retrofit power plants with clean coal technologies.
According to a study prepared by the National Economic Research Associates (NERA), the legislation is among the most expensive EPA rules ever imposed on coal-fueled power plants that will cause electric rates to skyrocket by as much as 23 percent and lead to nationwide employment losses totaling 1.4 million job-years by 2020.
Power-plant closures are expected to increase in the coming months, as utilities complete their cost analyses of complying with the Cross-State rule, according to Industrial Info Resources. The EPA rule has already forced coal facilities in Ohio, North Carolina, Georgia, and Texas to retire old units, rather than bare the expense of installing pollution-control equipment.
The coal industry maintains that the EPA doesn't seem to care about the economic damage new regulations will cause."
I’ll defer to your vast knowledge on the subject.
Im sure the environmentalists and EPA have made sure the grid was maintained, upgraded, supplemented, added redundancy, and trees were properly trimmed over the last forty years, based on predicted population and economic growth, and have never obstructed any of the preparations for the surety of such a natural disaster.
Except that is not the premise of this post.
Gawd, are you such a juvenile that you cannot face the basic fact that this was a major severe, sudden and unexpected weather event and that alone is sufficient to explain the outages?
That was the premise of the post. The storms caused the outages, the continued outages were caused by non maintained, unprepared grid
This is about much more than maintenance. This system brought down entire trees, not just limbs.
This is about much more than maintenance. This system brought down entire trees, not just limbs.
You certainly did not grasp all the ramifications I cited for outages. Of course storms precipitated the events, but continued outages were prolonged by all the reasons mentioned by other FR posters: Inability to trim trees, lack of maintenance on infrastructure because of EPA mandates steering capital away from transmission upgrades, etc.
You certainly did not grasp all the ramifications I cited for outages. Of course storms precipitated the events, but continued outages were prolonged by all the reasons mentioned by other FR posters: Inability to trim trees, lack of maintenance on infrastructure because of EPA mandates steering capital away from transmission upgrades, etc.
Excellent post, and I only wish I could have included your citation about the tree huggers not allowing trees to be trimmed - the trees that would eventually bring down power lines.
You just don't want to deal with the facts, I see.
The only infrastructure change that would have prevented this would be to bury the utility lines underground. That is prohibitively expensive and there are many, many other more pressing infrastructure needs in the Northeast, such as aging water, sewer and road systems, which is why you don't see utility line burial happening much in older suburbs.
Second, local opposition to tree-trimming is often driven by aesthetic concerns, as many homeowners don't want their pretty trees in their front yards mangled by utility crews. The EPA has nothing to do with that.
Third, as I noted, this was an event with no significant lead warning. Most of the time, regional outages such as this one are due to systems where there is a lead forecast warning - hurricanes, blizzards, ice storms, etc - and outside utility crews often have a 2-3 day head start to the affected region to help restore power. There was no such warning for this event. Derechos often just pop up and promulgate themselves for hundreds of miles. Hence the longer-than-expected delays in getting electric service restored.
I have no problem attacking EPA idiocy. However, our attacks need to be tied to the facts of a given situation, otherwise the liberal idiots can point to posts such as yours as proof that EPA critics are unreasonable and out of touch.
Echoes of our Labor Day Derecho
Note the two images from the 1999 derecho. It buckled a steel hi-tension tower and toppled groves of trees. That is what hurricane-force gusts can do.
So tell me again how the issues you raise about infrastructure would have made a difference in the face of a storm that can do such things.
Here in the south we call that “yankee thinning weather”. It makes them want to go home
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