California rolling blackouts lifted. Heat wave continues

Bob Morris
2 min readAug 16, 2020

California ISO manages the flow of high-voltage long-distance electricity for 80% of California. Their charts show how they manage the current heat wave and huge demand for power. For a bit they were forced to institute rolling blackouts to keep supply and demand in balance.

Happily, the rolling blackouts are now gone. As of 3 PM Sunday they have plenty of power in reserve. Wow. And one-third of it is coming from renewable sources, mostly solar, then wind. That’s also impressive. California is a leader in renewable energy and the investment is paying off.

Natural gas is still king

However, if we drill down a bit, we see that natural gas and imports are still crucial. The Today’s Outlook chart shows natural gas generating 42% of power. Imports, which are all sources of power from out of state, like big hydro in Washington and Nevada, solar power in Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico and maybe a few still functioning coal plants too. Yes, power comes to California from hundreds of miles away. About 15% of impored power is lost in transmission too.

Supply trends

The Supply Trends image shows renewables and natural gas ramping up fast as imports drop. That’s because, for example, Hoover Dam is in southern Nevada and generates a…

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Bob Morris

Topple Trump, leftie politics, renewable energy, water polizeros.com, since 2003.