lpetrich
Contributor
The Drive to Replace Summer-Only ‘Peaker’ Power Plants | WIRED - "These power plants run during the hottest months, when energy is in demand. But they are expensive, and they pollute nearby low-income neighborhoods."
Expense?
Renewable-energy development is stimulating a large amount of research into storage technologies and synfuels. Research that never happened with nuclear energy, as far as I know, even though it would be very useful for that kind of electricity generation.
Wind and solar energy have the problem that they are intermittent, and nuclear energy has the problem that it is too steady. Storage technologies get around both problems.
Expense?
Air quality?A new report has found that New Yorkers over the last decade have paid more than $4.5 billion in electricity bills to the private owners of the city’s peaker plants, just to keep those plants online in case they’re needed—even though they only operate between 90 and 500 hours a year. Even at the upper limit, that’s less than three weeks. This all means that the price tag for peak electricity in the Big Apple is 1,300 percent higher than the average cost of electricity in the state.
What to do about peakers?]In the South Bronx neighborhoods of Hunts Point and Longwood, asthma hospitalization rates are nearly double the city average. Peaker plant emissions during a severe summer heat wave can exacerbate this underlying burden. Dariella Rodriguez, director of community development for The Point CDC, a South Bronx nonprofit that is part of the PEAK Coalition, says that residents being stuck indoors during the Covid-19 pandemic highlights the urgency of finding alternative solutions to existing peaker plants.
“Especially in the South Bronx, in a community like Hunt’s Point, where we know we’re very vulnerable to heat, weak infrastructure, and also air quality, this is a moment to rethink how our city and our state can use the land, build clean infrastructure, and support groups that are engaging in creative ways to change their communities,” Rodriguez said.
I note that nuclear-power advocates support nuclear reactors for baseload electricity generation, not peak generation. Who has ever heard of a nuclear-reactor peaker?The reports argue that renewable energy and battery storage are the best alternatives to replace fossil-fuel-fired peaker plants. In California, for instance, the aging Oakland Power Plant will soon be replaced with a mix of solar and battery storage. In New York City, environmental advocates have been pushing to transform Rikers Island, which houses the city’s most notorious jail complex, into a green infrastructure hub that would replace the peaker plants in the southernmost peninsula of the Bronx.
Renewable-energy development is stimulating a large amount of research into storage technologies and synfuels. Research that never happened with nuclear energy, as far as I know, even though it would be very useful for that kind of electricity generation.
Wind and solar energy have the problem that they are intermittent, and nuclear energy has the problem that it is too steady. Storage technologies get around both problems.