On Monday, 28 April [2025],
Spain and Portugal suffered a crippling blackout. What was the cause?
A maniacal, bare-chested
Vladimir Putin, swimming underwater with a knife between his teeth, cutting
ocean floor power cables? No, it was
not.
The psychotic pair of Donald
Trump and J. D. Vance tossing anti-NATO hand grenades onto the power grid from
a prototype F-47? No, it was not.
Who is the culprit, then?
It is in fact the green
energy promoting, climate saving crusaders of Spain. Their replacement of electricity generation
from hydrocarbon and nuclear plants with solar and wind generation has made the
electricity grid unstable:
‘The inability of Spain’s
electricity grid to manage an unusually high supply of solar power was a key
factor in Monday’s catastrophic blackout, former regulators and experts have
said.
‘About 55 per cent of Spain’s
supply was from solar sources when 15GW of electricity generation disconnected
from the grid within just five seconds on Monday afternoon, triggering a
wide-ranging shutdown of power systems in Spain and Portugal.
‘Several European experts
said that Spain appeared to lack enough firm power — readily available,
reliable energy supply from sources such as fossil fuels or nuclear that can be
reduced or raised — to kick in when the grid’s frequency dropped sharply at 12.33pm
on Monday. Frequency, the rate at which electrical current alternates, must be
kept stable for the grid to function.
‘ . . . André Merlin, the
founder and former chief executive of France’s grid operator RTE, told the
Financial Times: “Two-thirds of [Spain’s electricity] production was made up of
non-controllable resources. These non-controllable resources . . . don’t
contribute to the stability of the internal electrical system.”
‘ . . . Grid operators must
constantly balance supply and demand of electricity to keep the frequency of
the grid stable, and avoid damaging equipment or outages. This stability is
easier to achieve with turbines powered by fossil fuels, hydroelectric or nuclear energy than with renewable technologies such as
solar. Spain’s grid frequency dropped sharply below the optimal 50Hz rate at
12.33pm on Monday.
‘The reliance on solar energy
at the time of the outage has led to criticisms of Red Eléctrica. Normally
about a fifth of the country’s supply comes from solar power.
‘Sanz, a former adviser on
the energy transition to the Spanish government, said that there was “poor
management” of the grid, by not having enough nuclear, hydroelectric or fossil
fuel energy scheduled to balance the system. Of the scheduled 26GW of electricity
supply on Monday, just 5GW came from non-intermittent sources.
‘The Brussels-based adviser
pointed to Red Eléctrica’s own 2024 annual report, which said that
disconnections caused by “high renewable penetration” without enough “necessary
technical capabilities for an adequate response to disturbances” was a risk to the
system’ (Alice Hancock, Ian Johnston, Financial Times, ‘Spain and
Portugal blackout blamed on solar power dependency,’ archive.is).
Like all fervent ideologues,
however, the Spanish greens are loathe to admit that their faith is false:
‘Spanish grid operator Red
Eléctrica has said that it still does not know the exact cause of the outage.
Chief executive Beatriz Corredor denied that renewables “made the system more
vulnerable” in an interview with El País on Wednesday.
‘ . . . But she [Corredor]
launched a stern defence of Spain’s renewable systems and pointed to
unreliability of other energy sources, including nuclear. “[Renewables] are not
insecure technologies. The proof is that the system operates with renewables every
day . . . It’s
not true that higher penetration of renewables has made the system more
vulnerable” (Ibid.).
With such a stark warning
staring us squarely in the face, surely Louisiana and her neighbors in Dixie
would refuse to build massive solar and wind farms to generate electricity for
homes, churches, businesses, etc., . . . right?
Wrong.
Morehouse Parish in Louisiana
is running headlong into that ditch:
. . .
The rest is at https://thehayride.com/2025/05/garlington-more-solar-and-wind-power-brings-increased-risk-of-blackouts/.
--
Holy
Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema
to the Union!
No comments:
Post a Comment