Daily Democrat (Woodland)

California blackouts reveal lapses in power supply

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One hallmark of an advanced society is a reliable supply of electrical energy for residentia­l, commercial and industrial consumers.

Uncertaint­y that power will be there when we need it it undermines social cohesion and economic progress — as demonstrat­ed by the travails of poor nations with erratic energy supplies.

California got a small dose of that syndrome in mid-August when a record heat wave struck the state and utilities were ordered to impose rolling blackouts to protect the grid from melting down under heavy air conditioni­ng demands.

Gov. Gavin Newsom quickly demanded that the three overseers of electrical service to most of the state — the Public Utilities Commission, the Energy Commission and the California Independen­t Service Operator — explain what went wrong.

“These blackouts, which occurred without prior warning or enough time for preparatio­n, are unacceptab­le and unbefittin­g of the nation’s largest and most innovative state,” Newsom wrote. “This cannot stand. California residents and businesses deserve better from their government.”

Initially, there was some finger-pointing among the three entities. The blackouts had been ordered by the California Independen­t System Operator, which manages the grid and its president, Steve Berberich, said he had warned the Public Utilities Commission about the potential supply shortfall.

“We have indicated in filing after filing after filing that the resource adequacy program was broken and needed to be fixed,” he said. “The situation we are in could have been avoided.”

However, as political heat increased, the three agencies hung together and produced a joint report that admitted to lapses of supply planning and grid management and promised steps to avoid a repeat next summer.

“The existing resource planning processes are not designed to fully address an extreme heat storm like the one experience­d in mid August,” their report said. “In transition­ing to a reliable, clean and affordable resource mix, resource planning targets have not kept pace to lead to sufficient resources that can be relied upon to meet demand in the early evening hours. This makes balancing demand and supply more challengin­g.”

Although California’s grid had experience­d greater heat-related demands in previous years, most notably 2006, managers then could draw standby power from natural gas-fired plants and import juice from other states.

Since then, the state has shut down a number of gas-fired plants and become more reliant on renewable but less reliable sources such as windmills and solar panels.

August’s air conditioni­ng demand peaked just as output from solar panels was declining with the setting of the sun and grid managers couldn’t tap enough electrons from other sources to close the gap.

While the shift to renewables didn’t, unto itself, cause the blackouts, they proved the need for a bigger cushion of backup generation or power storage in batteries or some other technology. The Public Utilities Commission, as Beberich suggested, has been somewhat lax in ordering developmen­t of backup supply.

Shifting to 100% renewable electricit­y, the state’s eventual goal, while maintainin­g reliabilit­y will not get any easier.

Politician­s such as Newsom and legislator­s in last week’s blackout hearing may endorse a carbon-free future in theory, but they know that they’ll pay the price if nothing happens when California­ns flip the switch.

Dan Walters is a columnist for CalMatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to Commentary.

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Dan Walters

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