Poor T. Boone Pickens - He Means So Well
The Plan, as I’m sure you know, goes like this: We’ll put up lots and lots of windmills, beginning with Pickens’ own contributions in West Texas. That will replace the 20 percent of our electricity that is produced with natural gas. Then that “wedge” of gas will be picked up like a piece of pie and moved over to the transport sector, where it will power our cars. That will enable us to reduce a big chunk of our imported oil.
Sounds plausible, right? According to the video on his site (http://push.pickensplan.com/), Pickens is drawing huge, enthusiastic crowds around the country and hobnobbing with the likes of Al Gore, Bill Clinton, President Barack Obama and Steven Chu. “I was sitting between two Nobel Prize Winners the other night,” he says at one point. He’s a sweet, well-meaning guy – the “Texan of the Year” in 2009 - but unfortunately he’s marching in the wrong direction. If the Pickens Plan were put in place tomorrow, we’d be much worse off than we are now.
Here’s the reason. Wind is an intermittent source of energy. It comes and goes unpredictably. You can’t do that with an electrical grid. The voltage balances must be maintained within about a 5 percent margin or you run into all kinds of trouble – either power lapses and brownouts or power “surges” that can damage electrical equipment. (That’s why you have a “surge protector” between your wall outlet and your computer.)
Both solar and wind come and go unpredictably but wind is far worse. The sun at least has a diurnal pattern. You can predict where it will be at any time of day. Only when it is darting back and forth among the clouds is it a problem.
Wind is always a problem. It comes and goes with the wind, as they say. Moreover, the electrical output of a windmill varies with the cube of wind speed, so that magnifies the problem. All this can be masked as long as wind’s contribution remains small but once you get beyond 10 percent you start running into problems. Most engineers say you can’t go above 20 percent with current technology. Denmark claims 20 percent windmill capacity (a big difference from output) and on average seems to get about 13-15 percent of its electricity from wind but it has stopped building windmills altogether. They created too many problems on the grid.
Now, here’s the rub. There is one way that windmills can be integrated onto the grid. That is to pair them with natural gas turbines. Gas turbines are different from ordinary electrical boilers in that they do not produce steam to turn the turbines. The exhaust gases drive the turbines directly. That gives them a big advantage in following load. They can be started, stopped and adjusted almost instantaneously. With a coal plant or a gas boiler, on the other hand, it may take 45 minutes before they can get up to speed.
Gas turbines have mostly been used to this point to meet the “peak” demands that occur on hot summer afternoons. Utilities find it far too expensive to build major generators that may be used only a few weeks of the year. So they install gas turbines - essentially jet engines bolted to the ground - which are cheap to build but very expensive to operate because fuel is the major cost. That’s why, although natural gas constitutes 39 percent of our electrical generating capacity, it provides only 20 percent of our electricity – because the plants sit idle most of the time.
Now if we start installing lots of windmills, it can only mean one thing. We’re going to start installing and using a lot more gas turbines as well. They’ll run right alongside the windmills, starting and stopping to compensate for the wind’s fluctuations. The major turbine manufacturers – General Electric, Siemens, Toshiba – are already redesigning their turbines and advertising them as “the ideal companion for wind.” The Department of Energy’s 2006 study, “20% Wind by 2030,” which originally inspired Pickens, estimates half the nation’s current gas consumption will be needed to supplement wind but it will probably be much more. California, which leads the nation in becoming “clean and green,” now gets 40 percent of its electricity from natural gas – twice the national average.
If our pursuit of a “renewable America” has the same result as it has in California, it will be a national disaster. Our consumption of gas for electricity went from zero to 20 percent between 1990 and 2000 in order to deal with sulfur emissions. Then it hit the wall, causing a six-fold run-up in price – bigger than the oil run-up during the Arab Oil Embargo. The result was 100,000 lost jobs in the chemical and fertilizer industries, which use gas as a feedstock and moved abroad to be closer to cheap supplies. If employing more gas to compensate for wind causes another price run-up, there isn’t going to be much left of industrial America.
There is only one energy source that can replace gas in the way Pickens wants to do and that’s nuclear power. If Pickens had real nerve, he’d become the biggest advocate of the nation’s nuclear revival. But then he wouldn’t get to sit down with Bill Clinton and Al Gore. And so the Pickens’ Army will continue its aimless march on Washington, confusing even more the muddle that already prevails there today. Despite his good intentions, he’s wasting a huge opportunity to rescue the American economy.
Other Posts by William Tucker
Help! I'm a prisoner in the Senate Office Building! - June 4, 2009
People of Plenty - May 8, 2009
Windmills - America's New Samurai Sword - April 30, 2009
There's Plenty of Energy at the Bottom: Being a Meditation on Why Silicon Valley Won't Solve the Energy Crisis - April 20, 2009
As a Nuclear Advocate, I say "Let's Close Oyster Creek." - April 8, 2009
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earthling09 said:
Getting 1/3 of our energy consumption off the "utility grid," would be significant progress. The mass customization refers to designing each individual house to use less energy and to tap into the energy available in the area it is built.I recommend using a combination of small scale energy extraction techniques. Solar is the first most obvious method, but it would not work very well in Seattle. Tidal energy may work better there. Of course, that would require an energy grid to deliver the energy to the houses, but at least it would be relatively clean energy. Small wind turbines for individual houses and farms are another idea. Nuclear energy can be developed for large scale industrial purposes.
We have engineered this artificial dependence on big business into our economic infrastructure. It is a well known marketing strategy. I'm suggesting that we can and should re-engineer our economy to replace the culture of dependence that big business is selling, with a healthy interdependence. One that nurtures the creative freedom inherent in human nature, for example, schools that teach people financial responsibility and free enterprise, instead of teaching people how be employees and depend on big business. And one that inspires us to live in harmony with each other and our natural habitat.
The cost of not transforming our personal, social and economic development systems is the collapse of an unsustainable economy, and perhaps the greatest mass extinction in the history of earth has already started.
100,000 years from now, our decendants will be looking around, investigating the pollution layer, just like we investigate the Iridium layer associated with the extinction of dinaosaurs. Before the pollution layer there is war, crime and disease. After the pollution layer there is one universal and divine civilization evolving in harmony with our natural habitat.
Let's get to work. I have no cost estimate. I do know that we can design an economic infrastructure that serves all the people of earth, not just an ambitious few who have organized human civilization in order to preserve their advantage over the vast majority of earth's inhabitants.
And I am not opposed to big business. I like cars and computers and stuff. I just want our businesses to serve all the people. I do not want a few people using our businesses infrastructure as leverage to promulgate this oppressive culture of dependence that permiates our civilization right now.
It's not just the energy industry either. Its the doctors, lawyers and teachers who are promoting this new caste system based on the credentials that schools sell, and the drugs that doctors and pharmaceutical companies are selling.
We need a new declaration of independence from the self appointed ruling class that our constitution abolished a couple of hundred years ago. The United Nations is the greatest civilization that has ever existed on earth. The human race is coming together into a universal federation of nations.
Allah'u'Abha
Bill Hannahan said:
Earthling, houses account for about 1/3 of our electric consumption. What do you propose for the other 2/3? What do you propose when the wind is not blowing and the sun is not out? Show us your cost estimate.earthling09 said:
I propose replacing the electrical grid with houses that use very little energy in the first place (Jimmy Carter conservation), and that have their own generating capacity, starting with solar, including wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, whatever works best for each individual building. Small scale mass customization.Cut the umbilical cord. Set the people free from this totally artificial dependence on giant energy extraction and utility companies.
Use hydrocarbons in our chemical industry, not our energy industry.
I also propose eliminating corporate income taxes. They would, of course, pay sales taxes and user fees, etc. The point is to return America to the government of the people, by the people and for the people, and no taxation without representation and all that. We'd have to totally revamp tax code to make it possible for individuals to protect assets, without out hiding personal income in corporations, etc.
We want and need the benefits of big business, we just want the big businesses to serve the people, and to operate in harmony with earth's biosphere. We do not want big businesses interfering in our governments, running roughshod over our people and wreaking havoc in our natural habitat.
Bill Hannahan said:
Actually
Wind subsidies have given
In
http://www.ecolo.org/documents/documents_in_english/Wind-heat-06-5pc.htm
Over the entire
Electricity consumption for the nation jumped 20% above average during July and August.
Nuclear plants run at 100% rated power all the time because of their low fuel cost, yet nuclear power production was 10% above average during July and August because utilities schedule refueling outages for spring and fall when loads are low. The rest of the shortfall was largely picked up by natural gas plants.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epm/table1_1_a.html
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epm/table1_1.html
RodAdams said:
William - do you really believe that Pickens got where he is today without the ability to understand the law of supply and demand and the importance of marketing when you want to increase sales of your product?CharlesBarton said:
William it is even worse than you indicate.~26nbsp~3b Wind generators produce more power at night.~26nbsp~3b The demand for peak generating power~2c supplied by natural gas~2c is during the day.~26nbsp~3b Wind also generates more power during the winter than during the summer~2c and wind generation usually drops on hot summer days when electrical demand for airr conditioning rises.~26nbsp~3b In both Texas and California daytime wind output can drop to 2~25 of name plate capacity on hot summer days.~26nbsp~3b T. Boone Pickens use to be smart enough to figure this out. ~26nbsp~3b But then so are Al Gore~2c Bill Clinton~2c President Barack Obama and Steven Chu~2c who all seem unaware of the most basic facts about wind. ~26nbsp~3b~26nbsp~3b But then we have members of the energy collective who ignore the liabilities of wind too.~26nbsp~3b Did I just say that~3f~26nbsp~3b ~3cbr~3e-
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