Posted on 01/19/2018 9:37:15 AM PST by markomalley
New England is facing an energy future of rolling blackouts and controlled outages by 2025 as more power plants close down and pipeline capacity continues to lag behind.
The new report by the New Englands grid operator comes after the region suffered through a frigid start to the new year that pushed up prices and strained energy supplies. It could be just a taste of the regions future.
Taken together, the study results suggest that New England could be headed for significant levels of emergency actions, particularly during major fuel or resource outages, ISO New England found in a new study,
Harder to measure are the risks to the region from brief, high-demand cold spells, which present particular logistical challenges for fuel procurement and transportation, the study found.
ISOs study found retirements of power plants with stored fuel, tightening emissions restrictions, and the reliance on a fuel that may not be available when needed most are all challenging New Englands power system, especially during extreme cold spells.
New England has increasingly become reliant on natural gas, which is mainly supplied through pipelines and liquefied natural gas imports. But without adequate pipeline capacity, power plants strain to keep the lights on.
Environmentalists have played a major role in killing pipeline projects meant to bring natural gas to the northeast. New Englanders can also thank Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo for the lack of pipeline capacity.
Cuomos taken a hardline stance against new natural gas pipelines, including those running through his state to New England. Cuomos blocked at least three major pipeline projects in the past two years.
As Cuomo mulls a presidential bid in 2020, hes become more conscious of critics on his left, including environmentalists who oppose all fossil fuel pipelines.
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What New York has shown is a model for examining the potential impacts to clean water of pipelines, Amy Mall, a senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council, told Politico. Theyve done it in a way that is methodical and comprehensive and sufficiently rigorous to understand what the risks are.
New Englanders suffered through some of the highest energy costs in the world because of political opposition to more pipelines. In the future, it could mean losing power.
The regions grid operator found all but the most optimistic case resulted in load shedding, also known as rolling blackouts or controlled outages that disconnect blocks of customers sequentially.
Load shedding is implemented as a last resort to protect the grid, ISO New Englands study found. All but three of the single-variable cases resulted in some degree of load shedding.
Temperatures began to drop around Christmas, and extreme cold continued through the new year. Most of the eastern U.S. saw a top five coldest start to the new year on record, which was followed by a big noreaster storm.
But New Englands energy risks are nothing new. The region struggled to keep the heat and lights on during the 2014 polar vortex and an ISO report from November warned that pipeline constraints would limit the availability of fuel for natural-gas-fired power plants.
As natural gas use increases, coal- and oil-fired power plants have retired in recent years, in part due to state and federal policies favoring green energy. Federal environmental regulations have also played a role as has the drop in natural gas prices.
New Englands Pilgrim nuclear power plant is slated to close in 2019, much to the excitement of environmentalists. But again, it will put more strain on the electric grid during episodes of extreme cold.
Fuel-security risks may be more acute in New England than in most other regions because New England is at the end of the pipeline when it comes to the fuels used most often to generate the regions power, the ISOs new study found.
New England has no indigenous fossil fuels and therefore, fuels must be delivered by ship, truck, pipeline, or barge from distant places, reads the report, which only analyzed an incremental increase in pipeline capacity by 2025.
Hahaha. Now winter owns these LIB lunatics. Hahaha.
Several years ago, Cuomo wanted to close many of the nuclear power plants across the state, and he proposed to buy Quebec hydro-electical power.
The power shortage in New York State and New England is real and becomes most evident during peak demand situations.
Proposed was that New York City power was to be supplied by an electrical cable running from Canada, under Lake Champlain, then under the Hudson river,
all the way to the city.
Extreme measures from an extreme potential candidate trying to appeal to the further Left, and ignores the need throughout the Northeast.
Government rationing of power is the only workable solution (for liberals)
Frozen libs salute!
The neighboring states really have no objection. They (the government not the people) have gone along with this for years
Let them bitch to the global climate change envirowackos .......
grrrrrrrrrrrrr.... I mean, brrrrrrrrrrr....
Shitholing your state made easy by out of control liberals.
More of O’Muslim’s evil legacy. He wanted to kill the coal industry, as we Freepers know. He needs to be in prison with HildaBeast.( Hey, a girl can dream, can’t she? )
I’ve had two friends describe this phenomenon; one was in Argentina after the Falklands War, and another in CA while Grey (-out) Davis was governor. Both described it as very Third World, especially because both were in an infrastructure designed for readily-available electricity.
This is how leftards wreck the lives of their voting base. But people do vote their self interest and the progressives are reaching that tipping point where the free stuff they give out is outweighed by the hardships they create with their eco-marxism.
That’s what got Trump elected at the national level and since NeverTrump blue states are dialing their crap up to 11 to offset the federal changes it won’t be long before the pain results in more local rejection. New California is an example.
Reminds me of So California back around 2001 when it was so hot there were rolling blackouts due to not enough electricity. Some local city there even turned down plans to build a new natural gas fired plant in their area.
I e-mailed some friends there bragging about how where I worked, in a power plant in Arkansas, we had so much excess electric power we were opening the outlets and letting it flow on the ground.
They were not amused.
In this PC world, the term “Rolling Blackouts” is hurtful.
The new term is Serious Transmission Deficits (STDs).
Good! Now take them off the grid so they aren’t driving my prices higher by sucking at the grid teat...
Lemmings always have regrets right after clearing the cliff’s edge.
More likely, they'll just buy more power from Quebec Hydro.
They have the Seabrook plant.
sitting there shivering in their dark and cold houses, the eco-fanatics of the northeast can be happy that their windmills and solar panels are letting them slowly freeze to death in the dark night and that they have saved the world by closing down their coal/oil/natural gas fired power plants, limited oil and natural gas production and closed nuclear power plants.
What did democrats use for light before candles?
Electricity !
The MA republican gov, Charlie Brown, seems to want to make the illegals nice and warm and provided with the best we can offer, by edging towards becoming a ‘sanctuary state’..
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