Seems legit
Seems legit
Very interesting. Would be interesting to find out what drove the need for higher frequency reserves in Australia, but batteries crushed that growth and then some.
Also cool to see distributed batteries taking a bite, wish we could provide this service in the US!
By raising electric bills and increasing power outages during hurricanes and heat waves, the Big Ugly Bill deserves a new name:
Β
πͺ« The Big Blackout Bill πͺ«
**sponsored by Big Oil and Gas
Tell your Reps not to vote for the blackout bill. Tell them you like cold drinks & air conditioning and if they vote for this they are taking those away from you & making energy more expensive. With all the new demands on the grid from AI, now is not the time to raise taxes on American clean energy.
The Senate version of GOP's budget bill dropped in the middle of the night. Astonishingly, it got EVEN WORSE. It raises energy costs, kills $100s of billions of investment in manufacturing, makes grids less reliable, increases pollution & constrains our ability to compete w/China on AI. Loser stuff.
Iβll say this, if the outcome is bad (it ainβt over yet - still
some room to maneuver it seems) we need to relentlessly connect the dots to the consequences and make people like Alex Epstein OWN them
Spot on. This is the clearest explanation Iβve seen. It βs relatable, and humanizes the issue in a way everyone can understand.
In Oakland, cross streets to the march were uncontrolled, except for volunteers in yellow vests and their cargo bikes. Useless against a maniac in a F150 or cargo van. This was negligence on the part of the OPD and just dumb luck something similar or worse didnβt happen.
Great commute bonus the last few days on the Bay
Great article on this topic in @canarymedia.com today.
www.canarymedia.com/articles/sol...
#EnergySky
Cause aside for a moment, the ability to black start a massive, nearly islanded system in less than a day is very impressive β especially doing so on a very IBR heavy system.
Thoughts?
#energysky
Yeah itβs hard to square that with βno permitsβ and βno utility permission neededβ
1440W per the NEC (80% rule means 12A for βcontinuousβ duty, that is 3+ hours
per day)
But if we take the German example, they allow up to 800W backfeed (last I checked) which would turn into about 440W at 120V in the US (vs 220V there)
Thatβs a good point! It seems like certification would still be an issue because you canβt ensure that only dedicated circuits are used once the equipment is in the wild.
That post discusses a loan, not TPO. The OP owns the system.
In general TPO providers have a strong incentive for smooth home ownership transfers compared to loan companies, FWIW
Claude fail whale
Sorry everyone I broke it
Post a warning
240V circuits are always dedicated. A 120V dedicated circuit is possible but then this isnβt plug & play, an electrician needs to run that; and then thatβs the only circuit the appliance would be allowed to use. In other words youβre back to hard wired.
Didnβt know that but makes sense! Loved watching my meter spin backward in the olden days tho, a neg sign on the LCD just ainβt the same feeling
Actually itβs super easy with analog meters, they literally spin backward and βunwindβ the readings. This is a big reason for simple net metering approaches, which long pre-date smart meters; no new metering had to be installed
Positive development β addresses utility interconnection issue in UT, but there are other challenges that need to be worked through. Big thread on this from a few months ago:
bsky.app/profile/alph...
UL Listing of this for intended application is a lot more involved than meeting UL 1741. Previous attempts have been unable to achieve listing because the concept of having a source & load on the same branch circuit is a non sequitur to the NEC, and UL wonβt list if NEC non-compliant
Heard - and acted on - this rumor earlier today. #energysky, have any details or confirmation including timing come to light in the last several hours?
Starter packs will get you the juice. Basically one-click follow of groups of folks focused in particular areas. Search for energy / climate / electrification and so on
If you see this, quote with flowers
Capacity expansion that is outpaced by reduction in capacity factor is all well and good, but there is a missing money problem there β¦
All good points!
At the end of the day though, the people who need to agree are UL and the relevant NEC code writing committees
Yeah, but once these things are on the market how do you ensure people actually do that?
There are lots of solutions that could work well and seem to be reasonable risk on an individual level, the problem is, multiply tiny annual prob of occurrence by 10s of millions of households
Interesting. What if you had two space heaters each drawing 12A on a single outlet (or an equivalent high impedance fault in wiring or equipment). It seems like you have no margin, or worse.