by Outcast_Searcher » Wed 26 Dec 2018, 13:09:26
This is really more a matter of poor constituent attitudes, re spending for having a much more durable and less vulnerable grid, than anything else.
There are not nearly enough backup transformers, etc. To have them available and ready to go for a big solar event, etc. that fried a lot of them, would require storing them in massive warehouses, lined with some kind of Faraday cage to protect them from big surges.
This might cost an additional 5% to 10% premium over time on your electric bill. How many customers would want to pay for that?
The whole damn grid and anything that controls it should NOT be directly assessible on the internet, or any national network, IMO. How much would it add to your electric bill if that were strictly verboten, and only small local control via small networks were allowed? 20% or so? How many would want to pay for that?
Much of the grid consists of old power lines, which aren't really maintained, but replaced when they fail. Most of the grid is exposed to weather and should be buried. How much would burying everything and then maintaining it properly cost?
We're our own worst enemy (as a society in the US), re having durable, well maintained critical infrastructure.
....
When there is a big event and power is down for, say, months, how likely do you think hungry people, perhaps represented by the government (cops, the army reserves, etc) won't coming banging on your door, demanding your "fair share" of your food/supplies to make things "fair" for the "common good"?
Do you hard core survivalists think you can hold them off with your AK-47, etc for long?
But you insist they'd never come for your property? Hell, if you make a good living, they come for roughly 50% of your earnings in total (all mandatory fees which aren't called taxes included) every year, and the vast majority of folks consider that normal and even good, using words similar to the words I used in the confiscation scenario above.
Planning is good. Common sense is good. I keep a good supply of bottled water and canned food and healthy food like dried fruit, nuts, beans, etc. I have a whole house natural gas generator and keep it maintained, so I'd need to lose both electricity and NG for days to be in real trouble. Not perfect -- but far more "practical prep" than most.
For the last 6+ years, I've experienced a number of 30ish second power outages, until the generator kicked on. My neighborhood / city has experienced 2 big events with outages for days, and many minor events with outages for hours (all weather related), so it's already been worth it.
Oh yes, and seeing Pop's post below, once it is cheaper and commonplace, I'd like rooftop solar and battery backup as the next step, re handling power outages. That provides more redundancy. I don't see it saving much money, as my electrical bill is typically only averaging perhaps $60 a month, and over time, it seems like economizing drives it down more than rate increases drive it up. So it's far more about having more ways to ensure the lights stay on (at least the ones I really need) in a future with more storms and AGW risks.
Last edited by
Outcast_Searcher on Wed 26 Dec 2018, 13:16:28, edited 3 times in total.
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.