| OGJ / AP News -- Reduced power possible during California summer evenings ................... 
 May 10, 2018
 
 Reduced power possible during California summer evenings
 
 By The Associated Press
 
 FOLSOM, Calif. (AP) -- The manager of California's power grid said Wednesday  that below-average hydroelectricity production could mean reduced  supplies for consumers during high-demand periods this summer.
 
 The California Independent System Operator's annual summer assessment  predicts supplies could dip during peak evening hours on hot days when  solar power dissipates and people get home from work and turn on air  conditioning.
 
 Cal-ISO said 2018 hydroelectric production will be  down 1,300 megawatts by late summer compared to the above-normal  production during a wet 2017. That's because snowpack water content was  just 51 percent of average as of April 2, according to the state  Department of Water Resources.
 
 Peak summer demand is projected to  be 46,625 megawatts under normal conditions. Last year's peak load was  50,116 megawatts on September 1, 2017.
 
 The analysis found a  50-percent probability that for at least one hour this summer officials  will need to declare a Stage 2 Emergency, which has not been implemented since 2007. A Stage 2 Emergency requires Cal-ISO intervention in the  market, such as ordering power plants online to meet surging demand.
 
 There's an extremely low probability officials will be forced to initiate rotating power outages, the report said.
 
 Officials warned consumers to expect so-called "flex alerts," voluntary calls to reduce power use.
 
 Natural gas limitations due to storage facility and pipeline outages could add  to the summer reliability concerns in Southern California, the report  said.
 
 Cal-ISO's annual summer assessment uses historical  temperatures ranging from normal to extreme and demand data along with  current power plant availability to build out 2,000 scenarios to  calculate the probabilities of results for each hour of the day.
 
 Copyright © 2018 PennWell Corporation.
 
 .
 .
 |