Enjoying the heatwave this summer? The electric utilities sure are.
And just wait ‘til you get
your next bill. They’ve been warning us
for months now that we’ll be in for a shocker as the average bill will jump
about a $13
per month .
That’s on top of what are already the second highest electric rates in the US, exceeded only by those in Hawaii. In Connecticut we pay twice as much money for electricity as customers in some other states.
But you get what you pay for
and, so far this summer, our electric supply and reliability hasn’t been an
issue as in other states. Aside from
storm damage, there have been no interruptions, no brown-outs or requests to
reduce consumption.
But increasingly we are relying
on electricity for more than just AC but also, more and more, for our transportation.
As Metro-North and Amtrak add
more service, that means more electric trains… and demands on Eversource. But again, so far so good this summer. Even on the hottest days the railroad has not
had to reduce its consumption by running trains slower.
Credit must also go to CDOT
which spent $912 million between 1993 and 2021 fixing
the railroads’ catenary system delivering that electricity. That’s why our trains keep running while
those in New
Jersey don’t.
Consider also CDOT’s recent
purchase of 46 new electric buses which will run on the CTfastrak busway
between New Britain and Hartford. Bought
under an $86 million federal grant, the new buses will be cleaner and quieter, running
250 miles per day on a single charge. CDOT plans to electrify
all 700 of its buses by 2035.
And we’re not even talking
about the future of electric-power airplanes or mandatory use of “shore power”
for cargo ships when docked, all in the name of clean air and global warming.
How about other electric
vehicles… e-school buses, light duty trucks (think Amazon local delivery) and,
of course, electric cars? Is “the grid”
ready for that increased demand?
Electric passenger car sales
have slowed in recent months as consumers seem reluctant to “go electric” until
we have more charging stations. But those
EVs are still selling: in Q2 EV
sales were up 11% year over year.
And that keeps Victoria Rojo mighty
busy planning for the future.
She’s the Lead Data Scientist
at ISO-New England, the
independent, non-profit organization that runs our region’s grid. They’re responsible for coordinating New
England’s 32,000 megawatt power capacity, working with 400 different generators
serving over 14 million customers. It’s
a second-by-second balancing act.ISO-New England Control Room
A physicist by training, she
projects that we will see a 23% increase in electric demand in just the next
decade (not including electric trains).
Nor does that projection include the effects of global warming on
increased AC usage. “That’s a difficult
one to adjust for,” she tells me.
Visit the ISO-NE.com
website and you’ll see a breakdown of electricity demand and how it’s being met. There’s also a daily projection of demand,
hour by hour, which proves amazingly accurate.
With the closing of the region’s
last
few coal-fired plants, New England is still heavily
reliant on natural gas and nuclear power for almost
two-thirds of its power. Renewables like solar and wind now answer
less than 5% of our needs.
Obviously, we will need more
power plants and a better transmission system (electricity suffers “line loss”
the farther you send it) to meet these growing demands. So Rojo’s planning is just the first step.
In the meantime, crank up the
AC.
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