Just studying NERC projections for all regions on North America 2000 to 2010. Interesting.
MAIN, which is the area whicn blacked out, claims to have existing 64,170 MW capability 2001, and 74,101 summer demand forecast for 2010, an increase of 9,931 MW predicted to come mostly as dual-fuel turbines (4,677) and combined cycle Nat. Gas. (768) plus out-of-region purchases (2,814).
SERC (southeast except florida) by comparison is huge, 156,058 2001; 192,306 2010; increase 36,250 all gas turbine or combined cycle.
WSCC (most of US and Canada west coast) is also huge, at 130,892 2000; 197,741 2010; increase 66,849 again all (95%) gas turbine or combined cycle gas.
from WSCC "Adequate supplies of natural gas are expected to remain available during the next ten years. However, as demonstrated by California’s experience in 2000, natural gas-fired generation may be subject to uncertainties during periods of unstable natural gas prices."
SERC is planning to add 2,600 miles of transmission in that time, mostly 230KV (%not avail), and WSCC is planning to add 3,000 miles of transmission 230KV or above. (+4.4%) MAIN data not available, though I have seen it elsewhere, and if I remember, the percentage was smaller.
Other than the fuel choices for expansions, these analyses looked rational and done by knowlegeable persons. We should remember that the types of generation planned as addition don't tax transmission the same as big hydro, or even central thermal and nuclear.
Point is, I fail to see where US$100 billion might be spent usefully on transmission. Figure 10,000 km of 2 Gw lines in 300Km pieces = US$10.8 billion would likely add some significant stability if reasonably placed. I still have a lot of difficulty with that politician's 100 billion figure, and am worried about the interests involved. How did he come up with that number? 10,000 km circles continent 2 or 3 times, 2 Gw is a measurable percentage of entire MAIN generation forecast for 2010.
ref "ABB - for DC xmission + stations 2 Gw 300Km in $US = $325,000,000"
I am also worried about plans to expand all future generation (e.g. 95%), with Natural Gas fired generation with no debate on how rational that is.
BP's world energy forecasts indicate N Gas proved reserves in trillion cuM.
1982 1992 2002 2003
USA 5.78 4.73 5.02 5.19
CANADA 2.75, 2.71, 1.69, 1.70
MEXICO 2.15 2.01 0.84 0.25
TOTAL N Amer 10.67 9.45 7.55 7.15
Consumption in billion cuM.
1982 1992 2002 2003
USA 514.0 583.4 667.5 na
CANADA 53.7 71.7 80.7 na
MEXICO 29.0 28.9 42.1 na
TOTAL N Amer 596.7 684.0 790.3 na
Easy to see that as of 2002, proved reserves only come to 9.0 years consumption. I know, proved reserves aren't all there is, but still i've seen realistic estimates of serious shortages by 2030.
That trend is going the wrong direction for my taste, given winters in canada.
I know about LNG ships, huge reserves in Russia but still, shouldn't new generation use a different fuel? Even oil, so much cheaper to transport by ship. 300 yr coal reserves. I'd vote for rationally installed nd operated nukes. Sure wind isn't going to do it, just a subsidy grab all it is so far. Oceans? Not even tested yet, wait 'till enviros get a look at it. Solar so far costs more energy to manufacture than the cells ever generate.
Also seen several items make me suspicious about accuracy of "proved reserve" figures.
"In the late 1980s, OPEC countries added as much as 300 Gb to their reported “proved†reserves although only about 10 Gb were added from new discoveries."
This should probably be different thread, but it's late.