I received this from a Quaker peace and social justice list-serve, 
where a member received it from a technical list he's on.

Grid stability and storage of power from intermittent sources need to 
be addressed ASAP.  I am a big promoter of wind, but renewables will 
only be able to start replacing coal and nukes after we have balanced 
wind generation with more solar, more appropriate-scale hydro (which 
will also be intermittent in many cases, especially as we see more 
droughts) and LOTS of conservation and efficiency.
I also assume that geo-thermal can eventually play a major role in 
reducing demand for electricity or other forms of power for heating 
and cooling (because it is not intermittent).   --Margaret


Too much success too fast exposes problems. An article from a technical
mailinglist.

/dan


Subject: Wind Power Risks

It is now becoming more common to hear of wind power caused outages. The
outages are either a loss of service because the wind has stopped
blowing or, surprisingly, because there is too much wind.

These problems were not so apparent when the percentage of wind power
was low compared to the overall capacity, and in particular to rapid
response generators such as hydro.

It seems that wind power has become too successful and the engineering
required to integrate it into different grids has lagged behind. In
particular, the correct balance is not being achieved between wind power
capacity in a region and the available replacement power sources -
transmission and local non-base load sources.

A recent outage in Texas illustrates the low wind example. An *IEEE
Spectrum* article by Peter Fairley explains the overload scenario.

The Texas outage on February 27 as reported by Reuters:
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN2749522920080228?feedType=RSS&feed
Name=domesticNews&rpc=22&sp=true

"Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) said a decline in wind
energy production in west Texas occurred at the same time evening
electric demand was building as colder temperatures moved into the
state.

The grid operator went directly to the second stage of an emergency plan
at 6:41 PM CST (0041 GMT), ERCOT said in a statement.

System operators curtailed power to interruptible customers to shave
1,100 megawatts of demand within 10 minutes, ERCOT said. Interruptible
customers are generally large industrial customers who are paid to
reduce power use when emergencies occur."

The IEEE article on power surges from wind farms is at
http://spectrum.ieee.org/feb08/5943 and the key paragraph is this:

   Wind-farm installation in Europe grew an estimated 38 percent last year,
   up from 19 percent in 2006, bringing the total capacity to about 67
   gigawatts (roughly the equivalent of 20 to 25 standard-size nuclear power
   plants). At those rates, European grid operators report, windmill
   construction is outstripping growth in transmission capacity. The result
   is that in wind-farm-rich countries such as Germany and Denmark, high
   winds cause large and unanticipated power flows that saturate the
   grids of neighboring nations. In recent years this has forced grid
   operators to curtail scheduled transfers of power between grids. In 2008,
   the grid operators warn, the unanticipated power flows could overload lines
   anywhere from the Czech Republic to the Netherlands.
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