Grids being served by renewable energy are reliable even in extreme weather conditions

Millions of Americans have been living without power for quite some time through the past week. This situation is attributable to the extreme winter season that escalated the dependence on electricity for warmth and other heat-generation operations. Nonetheless, the high demand for electricity is not the only problem leading to the shortage. Other factors include insufficient development of electricity utilities and restrictive regulations regarding the safety of forests from wildfires. Moreover, some grids need winterization to minimize future risks. This year witnessed millions of people spend the best part of winter in cold environments without power, making some freeze to death.

Meanwhile, politicians began pointing fingers at where fault should lie. Some decided to blame renewable energy for the sole creator of the outages. This move, of course, is simply not right. The technical failure was across the board for all energy generation in the state’s isolated power supply, and an investigation will look into how state policy played a role.

On the other hand, politicians started playing the blame game, with some pointing at renewable energy as the primary problem of a power outage. Experts have come up with an informed plan that will resolve such contentions about electricity supply in the future. A renewable energy research scientist from the University of Albany, Richard Perez, participated in the formulation of this plan. He explained that the electric grid could operate solely on renewable energy by engineering it to survive peak demand, harsh weather conditions, among other physical factors. Perez emphasized that the solar or wind energy structure must have high resilience to ensure continuous service provision even in extreme conditions.

The other challenge that people have managed to design the solution is the snowing on photovoltaic fields. The experts think that the ideal solution for this problem is winterizing the resources that can be coated with snow. This strategy has played out effectively in Canada, and the experts are hoping that it can shine in the US since Canada experiences way colder weather than the US. The next strategy is developing solar panels or wind turbines that can get the best results from any kind of weather. This move will help the country avoid the trouble of spending on the storage technology for this energy when they can tap it regularly and intensively. He outlined that a fusion of solar and wind energy collection technology can work out this magic and save the Americans the hustle of spending winter in blackouts.

댓글

답글 남기기