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by Manfredo_1
1914 days ago
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"Demand shaping" is a nice euphemism for energy shortages. And if we demand shaping we're just externalizing the cost to consumers that need to buy their own energy storage or change their energy usage patterns to accommodate the unreliable supply. Overproduction helps but doesn't eliminate intermittency. And pumped hydroelectricity is geographically dependent. The irony is that most places with extensive hydroelectric storage potential don't need wind and solar in the first place because they get their energy from hydroelectric generation. |
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It's a euphemism for storage heaters, storage air-conditioning, aluminium smelters that dial usage up and down and smart car chargers.
Lithium ion batteries are useful too, of course, but they cost more.
This is a problem where market based solutions shine. The only reason that fact isn't getting rammed down our throats by lobbyists is that the people who got religion about markets tended to be oil/gas people, who have since been thrashing the "renewables are unreliable" drum.
>Overproduction helps but doesn't eliminate intermittency.
Why should the goal be to eliminate it when we can adapt to it and thrive?
Personally, I'm more excited for applications of periodic free/-ve priced electricity than I am worried about shortages.