Power creation is instantaneous in response to demand, meaning that we actually store very little. In principle when you turn something on at your house that electricity is generated and transmitted instantly. The effect here is that our primary plants are pretty much built to match the expected capacity plus a little extra. While these big plants are great at power generation for the masses they do not like being shut down and spun up. In fact can take weeks to do so.YouBet said:I need to read up on this more. I'm still missing how the two actually physically connect. Maybe I'm missing something obvious.ac04 said:Texas is using #bitcoin mining to bolster its energy grid.
— Documenting Bitcoin 📄 (@DocumentingBTC) January 28, 2022
How? As #bitcoin miners are the most reliable buyer of electricity, the state can profitability build up its infrastructure. If a surge occurs, the miners turn off/on instantly when needed!⚡️https://t.co/nxKmEwWLCo
As an additional buffer we have much smaller sites that can be turned on quickly (minutes rather than weeks) ) in order to deal with peak demand on a day to day basis.
My takeaway here is that the miners are raising the constant power demand and in return more there would be more investment in primary capacity in exchange for them throttling / turning off when demand exceeds capacity.