Going to be tight in the morning
Ogre09 said:
Going to be tight in the morning
ERCOT asked all of us to conserve energy and only the Cowboys listened.
— Arun Rama (@arunformylife) January 15, 2024
twssOgre09 said:
Going to be tight in the morning
Ogre09 said:
Going to be tight in the morning
1982Ag said:
A (somewhat) related question. Most end users in Texas are able to choose their electricity provider, and their energy comes from the Texas grid. We live here in The Woodlands, and have no such choice - our electricity is provided through Entergy (I have no idea why), and I understand the the power comes out of Louisiana. Any thoughts on why, or how power generation from Louisiana differs from Texas? Thanks.
1982Ag said:
A (somewhat) related question. Most end users in Texas are able to choose their electricity provider, and their energy comes from the Texas grid. We live here in The Woodlands, and have no such choice - our electricity is provided through Entergy (I have no idea why), and I understand the the power comes out of Louisiana. Any thoughts on why, or how power generation from Louisiana differs from Texas? Thanks.
Mas89 said:
Wondering why companies don't build a new gas-fired plant next door or in the vicinity of the natural gas storage domes located in the Houston area. Like around Mt Belvieu or the other salt dome storage plants.
With the Houston area expanding and electricity becoming a problem, looks like a no brainer.
But instead we have dozens of solar farms being built and planned in the area only because of the huge government subsidies.
Keep up the good work. And if you have to take anybody offline tomorrow can you let it not be the New Colony off 969?giddings_ag_06 said:
Close. I'm Bluebonnet. And no, I pushed all the right buttons today. Outside of one big outage this morning, we've done very good overall I'd say. Our MW load has definitely gotten up there though. Tomorrow could be fun.
BrazosDog02 said:
Ah…so if I lived in the SPP and that tanked for some reason, it's just a matter of picking up assistance from the ISO neighbors to the east and/or west?
Whereas ERCOT relies on…itself only.
The rich folks are in the old Colony and Riverside. And don't you dare jinx me by telling me everything will be fine.giddings_ag_06 said:
Y'all rich folk will be the FIRST I use my clicker on tomorrow at 5am. Naw, all should be good honestly though unless generation kicks offline unexpectedly somewhere.
Thunderstruck xx said:
Utilities still work to be reliable though. They run annual studies to determine where reliability issues may come up and then plan system upgrades to address those issues. Now, I don't know how well they actually find all the potential issues, because we keep getting too many renewables put on the system rather than dispatcheable resources, but they are doing something. We will see if that is enough in the future.
BrazosDog02 said:
You are my hero. Just to be clear, I appreciate the explanation in a huge way and thank you for obliging me. It makes a lot more sense and since this isn't my wheelhouse, perhaps that explanation would serve many as well as it did myself. Thanks again, and yes, I'm going to read both posts over again. I work with electricity in terms of what happens at the house, I mess with my generators and I understand 60hz but when I'm at home, as long as I meet my parameters , which my provider does very well, then how it gets to my house is out of sight and out of mind. As such, I've had little cause to question or understand why it works or how it gets there.
Thanks again and that was awesome.
Quote:
ERCOT set an all-time peak demand record of 85,464 MW on August 10, 2023.
ERCOT set a new unofficial September peak demand record of 84,182 MW* on Wednesday, September 8, 2023, surpassing the previous September peak of 83,911 MW* set on September 7.
Prior to this year, the previous September peak of 72,370 MW was set on September 1, 2021. Last year, ERCOT set 11 new peak demand records and surpassed 80 GWs for the first time ever.