by jbeckton » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 15:58:48
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('skyemoor', '
')No, as I said, the hydro grid runs were provided as an example of power delivered over several hundred miles w/o HVDC.
Yes and I pointed out, a cherry picked example.
Please provide evidence that the current grid is capable of doing the same thing everywhere. You didn't find an example because the grid is not designed to do so. The transmission lines that transport the hydro power great distances were designed to do so, the current grid outside of these areas is not designed to do so.
Please provide a reference for a claim that the current grid could accomplish this transmission efficiently without upgrades across the eastern states.
Germany is already experiencing these problems:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ind power needs a corresponding grid infrastructure -- grid expansion necessary
One decisive factor for the further expansion of wind energy use will be the capacities of the electricity grids. Today, the grids in some regions of Germany, for example in Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony, are already approaching their capacity limits.
When the wind is strong, they are unable to take any additional wind power. The reason:
Up to now, electricity supplies in Germany have largely been decentralized, with power stations having been built across the country as close to the points of consumption as possible. This has made it possible to avoid transporting electricity across long distances.
The power grids were built to bring the energy from these power stations to the consumers, which has meant that, expressed in simple terms,
energy has always flown in one direction and only across relatively short distances. This has changed with the boom in wind energy. An increasing number of wind parks have been and are being built primarily in coastal and relatively sparsely populated areas of low consumption, which in periods of strong wind generate more energy than the area in question consumes at the same time. Consequently, this surplus energy must be transported over long distances.
The line grids in the coastal regions can no longer do this in their current state without limits. http://www.aweo.org/windEon2004.html