California generated 10% of it's energy via solar in 2015
Collapse
X
-
-
-
Comment
-
Comment
-
I haven't read the article, but I'm guessing 90% came from a different power source.CS6P-260P/SE3000 - http://tiny.cc/ed5ozxComment
-
Sounds like the guy who runs CalISO is optimistic about being able to handle more:
IMHO curtailing solar a few days per year isn't a big deal. We should just keep on building lots more utility-scale solar... having so much solar one has to curtail it frequently would be a great problem to have, it'd help drive demand for storage.Comment
-
Sounds like the guy who runs CalISO is optimistic about being able to handle more:
IMHO curtailing solar a few days per year isn't a big deal. We should just keep on building lots more utility-scale solar... having so much solar one has to curtail it frequently would be a great problem to have, it'd help drive demand for storage.Comment
-
Well who cares, California hit a new high for importing power to 36%, up another 2% since last year. CA is going backwards fast and the energy policy is failing big time.MSEE, PEComment
-
Comment
-
So if it did go up 2%, that'd still be below 2013. Do you have a link to your source?
I'm not sure why you keep saying Calfornia's energy policy is failing... I suppose http://www.forbes.com/sites/judeclem...e-electricity/ would explain, but it mostly says "electricity is expensive in california". It's true, when you actually fight climate change instead of denying it exists, power might cost a little more, but at least we're working on solving the big problerm rather than ignoring it. And since we waste a lot less electricity than most states, we don't end up paying that much more for our power. You know the old saying: waste not, want not.Comment
-
My install was finished just before Christmas. Since that time we've had nothing but rain/clouds and it appears because of el nino that we will have that ugly weather through april 2016.
So far this year (Jan) I've made 208 KWh with a 11 KW system.
Typically is solar generation this poor in S. CA during the winter months? Hardly seems like it is worth the investment. What have others generated so far this month (Jan 1-11)?
Comment
-
My install was finished just before Christmas. Since that time we've had nothing but rain/clouds and it appears because of el nino that we will have that ugly weather through april 2016.
So far this year (Jan) I've made 208 KWh with a 11 KW system.
Typically is solar generation this poor in S. CA during the winter months? Hardly seems like it is worth the investment. What have others generated so far this month (Jan 1-11)?
Comment
-
What is the Max California could generate with solar? 30%, 40%? without some sort of storage, I can't imagine more than 40% since sun only shines less than half of the day.
4X Suniva 250 watt, 8X t-105, OB Fx80, dc4812vrfComment
-
Comment
-
Utility-scale solar has a capacity factor of about 25% near Los Angeles, which is a fancy way of saying solar provides energy for about a quarter of the average day. So 25%, I'd say. But with some load shifting, could be a bit higher, even without storage.
Well, that's if load is constant throughout the day. If there's more load while the sun shines, the number's higher.
Looking at http://www.caiso.com/outlook/SystemStatus.html, seems like the peak after sunset doesn't quite fill in the hollow after sundown, so maybe 30%.
But you really don't want to curtail nuclear power plants, and they generate about 9%, so maybe only 21%Comment
Comment