Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

What if EVs were everywhere?

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Re “Heat pushes power grid to limit,” Sept. 1

Let’s consider if this heat wave, which is supposed to continue well into this week, were happening when almost all of our vehicles were electric. Would the power grid be able to handle this?

If school playground­s in Los Angeles are too hot for outside activities, presumHere students would return to classrooms. Will those classrooms all be air-conditione­d?

It’s time to look at the big picture now and analyze all our energy components and how they interrelat­e. A single solution cannot solve all the issues. With so many variables, there needs to be room for some customizat­ion.

Gretchen Hays Pacific Palisades

Your article on the heat wave explained how much we are having to scramble because our power grid doesn’t have enough capacity to support everyone’s air conditione­r going into overdrive. Unfortunat­ely, due to climate change, these heat waves are going to get worse.

This is exactly why we have to work hard to implement the Inflation Reduction Act now that it has been signed into law.

As you said, the California Energy Commission is working to bring more energy sources online, but the state needs more resources in order to do this faster — resources that the Inflation Reduction Act provides.

So let’s make sure that our legislator­s take advantage of the law and get the resources that are needed in order to make the next heat wave less of an issue. Nathan Adair

Burbank

The world is switching to electric cars, and because of the ongoing heat wave, there is concern about the power grid failing.

Congress can pass a bill to spend a few hundred billion dollars or more to upgrade weak areas of the electric grid.

The power grid is not a single piece. It is many substation­s and transmissi­on lines. It can be upgraded in sections, and any money spent will not be wasted, since the increased capacity will be needed to charge the increasing number of electric cars on our roads.

If there is money to forgive college debt, there has to be money for the electric grid — unless we’re really, really stupid.

Bill Serantoni

Thousand Oaks

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