The elephant is the room is renewables—wind and solar—which don’t work so well during the winter. From Irina Slav at oilprice.com:
- North American Reliability Corp: As much as two-thirds of the United States could experience blackouts in peak winter weather.
- Earlier this year, NERC issued a blackout warning for some parts of the U.S. over the summer, citing extreme temperatures.
- The regulator points to the lack of gas transport infrastructure as one of the main challenges for the U.S. grid this winter.
As much as two-thirds of the United States could experience blackouts in peak winter weather this and next year, the North American Reliability Corp has warned.
These warnings have become something of a routine for the regulatory agency lately. Earlier this year, NERC issued a blackout warning for some parts of the U.S. over the summer, citing extreme temperatures.
This latest warning also has to do with extreme temperatures. Yet it’s not just the temperatures themselves that are the problem. It’s the power generation mix that is making the grid more vulnerable.
In its latest assessment, NERC cited recent data showing that up to a fifth of generating capacity could be forced offline in case of a cold snap over areas that do not normally get this kind of weather.