picture

picture
picture

HTML/Java script

HTML/Java script

text

text

Pages

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Think Negawatts, Not Megawatts

By Spencer Reiss 03.23.09

Photo: James Day
7 Ways to Fix the Grid, Now:
Power to the People


Generate Electricity Everywhere


Deliver Clean Energy to Distant Cities


Store Power in Super Batteries


Monitor the Electrons in Real Time


Trade Electricity Like Pork Bellies


Make Conservation Simple (and Easy)
Problem

It's high noon in July. At 90-plus degrees outside, the masses are jonesing for AC. But it's seriously expensive to keep the juice flowing when demand crests. Firing up turbines that sit idle 360 days a year can multiply electricity costs by a factor of 10. How to keep cool without stressing the grid?

Solution

Pay big users to cut consumption when the need arises. Many utilities already do an ad-hoc version of this, an emergency practice known as demand response that has lately been promoted by Jon Wellinghoff, acting chair of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Now there's an alternative: Call EnerNOC, a Boston-based company that gangs commercial users who are willing, for a quarterly payment, to trim back operations on 30 minutes' notice. EnerNOC micromanages consumption at 3,400-plus locations from Maine to California. Between dimming lights, adjusting thermostats, and suspending industrial activities, the potential cuts top the output of a large nuclear reactor. And the savings can be huge. EnerNOC's cofounder, Tim Healy, points out that 10 percent of all US generating capacity exists to meet the last 1 percent of demand. Utilities paid EnerNOC $100 million last year simply to stand at the ready—insurance, in effect, against the inevitable days when every AC unit is humming.

Read More http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/magazine/17-04/gp_efficiency#ixzz0vg6NV6gm

No comments:

Post a Comment