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Washington Post: The ‘bomb cyclone’ is contradicting Rick Perry’s argument for coal

Posted by Advanced Energy Economy on Jan 5, 2018

AEE's Malcolm Woolf is quoted in this piece that challenges rationale for DOE-proposed grid rule that FERC is scheduled to act on by Weds., Jan. 10.

"The cold weather and swirling winds gripping the northeastern United States have created the sort of winter scenario that Energy Secretary Rick Perry has cited as a reason to bolster the reliability of the grid by boosting coal and nuclear power plants. Perry said that only those power plants could assure reliability because only they could keep 90 days’ fuel supply on site.  But so far in this windy two-week cold snap, the region’s electricity grid has responded with little disruption, and without any need to rev up aging coal plants, which supplied 6 percent of electricity in New England on Thursday.  And the biggest failure Thursday came from a power line failure that forced Entergy Corp to shut down its 688 megawatt Pilgrim nuclear power plant in eastern Massachusetts. No homes were affected, however, because the grid reserve was three times as big.”  Article also notes that higher spot energy prices do not significantly impact customers.

Read the full Washington Post article here.

  


This story also appeard Jan. 6 as "Grid copes with frigid weather without boost for coal" in print edition that you can view here.

Topics: United In The News