Los Angeles Times

POOR PLANNING LED TO ROLLING BLACKOUTS

Amid an August heat wave exacerbate­d by climate change, the state was unable to meet its energy needs, report finds

- By Sammy Roth

California suffered its f irst rolling blackouts in nearly 20 years because energy planners didn’t take climate change into account and didn’t line up the right power sources to keep the lights on after sundown, according to a damning self- evaluation released Tuesday by three state agencies.

The rotating power outages didn’t last long and affected only a small fraction of the state’s 40 million people. Slightly less than 500,000 homes and businesses lost power for as little as 15 minutes and as long as two and a half hours Aug. 14, with an additional 321,000 utility customers going dark for anywhere from eight to 90 minutes the following evening.

But officials should have been prepared for the climate- driven extreme heat that caused electricit­y demand to soar and brief ly left the nation’s largest state without sufficient power supplies, the state’s Energy Commission, Independen­t System Operator and Public Utilities Commission acknowledg­ed in a preliminar­y “root cause analysis” demanded by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The immediate cause of the power shortages was the heat storm, which saw California experience four of its five hottest August days in the last 35 years, the analysis found. Temperatur­e records were shattered across the American West, limiting the Golden State’s ability to make up for its energy deficit by importing electrons from other states.

State agencies failed to adequately plan for that type of heat event despite knowing how quickly the world is heating up, the report concluded. They also failed to direct electricit­y providers to buy sufficient power supplies to cover the evening hours when solar panels go off line. And they created

complex energy market mechanisms that masked the inadequaci­es.

“The combinatio­n of these factors was an extraordin­ary event. But it is our responsibi­lity and intent to plan for such events, which are becoming increasing­ly common in a world rapidly being impacted by climate change,” wrote Independen­t System Operator President Elliot Mainzer, Public Utilities Commission President Marybel Batjer and Energy Commission Chairman David Hochschild.

Careful planning to ensure adequate power supplies will become even more important as California phases out fossil fuels and moves toward 60% renewable energy by 2030 and 100% climatefri­endly energy by 2045, as required by state law.

Officials have consistent­ly said that intermitte­nt power sources such as solar panels and wind turbines didn’t cause the rolling blackouts. But gas- burning power plants that can fire up when the sun isn’t shining or the wind isn’t blowing have been shutting down in recent years, and California has largely failed to replace them with cleaner alternativ­es such as lithium- ion batteries.

State officials say they’ve been working to get more of those clean resources built but were caught off guard by the intensity and regionwide nature of the August heat wave. California nearly experience­d more rolling blackouts over Labor Day weekend.

“Our planning processes may have been a year or two off on when we needed to have the resources available,” said Ed Randolph, director of the Public Utilities Commission’s energy division. “We’ll absolutely need more steel in the ground.”

The root cause analysis also faults market mechanisms put in place by the Independen­t System Operator, a nonprofit corporatio­n that oversees the power grid for most of the state. A program known as convergenc­e bidding, in particular, is meant to help keep electricit­y prices steady but instead “masked tight supply conditions” during the heat wave, the analysis said.

Another way markets didn’t function as intended: Energy providers collective­ly under- scheduled the amount of electricit­y they expected to need. That allowed power plant operators to sell their juice to customers in other states, resulting in thousands of megawatts being exported even as the Independen­t System Operator warned that rolling blackouts were imminent.

Mark Rothleder, the grid operator’s vice president for market quality and regulatory affairs, said it’s not yet clear which utilities or other energy providers undersched­uled their demand. He said the analysis is preliminar­y, with more to come later this year.

Loretta Lynch, a former president of the Public Utilities Commission, is skeptical that the root cause analysis tells the full story.

Lynch led the utilities commission during the early- 2000s energy crisis, which saw Enron and other corporate power traders take advantage of California ratepayers by manipulati­ng a poorly designed electricit­y market to drive profits. She’s worried something similar could be happening now, even as the Independen­t System Operator says its markets are mostly functionin­g properly.

“The ISO’s preliminar­y analysis leaves more unanswered questions than answers,” she said in an email.

 ?? AN ANALYSIS Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? of August blackouts found that state off icials failed to plan for a regional heat wave and that complex market mechanisms obscured an energy shortage. Above, solar panels in Desert Center, Calif.
AN ANALYSIS Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times of August blackouts found that state off icials failed to plan for a regional heat wave and that complex market mechanisms obscured an energy shortage. Above, solar panels in Desert Center, Calif.
 ?? John Antczak Associated Press ?? ROLLING BLACKOUTS brief ly struck California on Aug. 14 and 15 amid a regional heat wave.
John Antczak Associated Press ROLLING BLACKOUTS brief ly struck California on Aug. 14 and 15 amid a regional heat wave.

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