I love this game. It's my favorite show.
Since I had a business meeting this afternoon in New York City (a small town just across the river from New Jersey) that went better than I ever imagined in my wildest dreams, I'm in the mood for some fun and relaxation.
I certainly want to get to the fun and dopey prediction that electric heating in New Jersey will lead to collapse of the power grid, but being long winded and possessed tonight of a great sense of fun, first I will divert myself by discussing the dopey idea that New Jersey is about to "go solar."
We hear all the time from people who don't understand even the minimal basics about energy about the wonders of the New Jersey solar industry, from people who know doodly squat about New Jersey and even less about industry and industriousness.
Because they can't understand numbers whatsoever, these people want to represent that the installation of tax break for rich people (not that I hate rich people - since I am planning on
being one) represents an irreversible swell toward the Godot's solar nirvana - this being Beckett's Godot for whom
self deluded consumerist twits wait anxiously although he never actually comes.
Then of course, there's numbers. We can tell about the solar nirvana and it's connection to reality by looking at numbers.
Here's some numbers about electricity production in New Jersey:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/nuclear/page/at_a_glance/states/statesnj.htmlI will point out the relevant information here.
In the period between 2002-2003, the share of electricity generated by natural gas in New Jersey
decreased from representing 31% of our generation capacity to 26%. Coal stayed depressingly constant at 16%. Petroleum rose from 1% to 3%, and nuclear generation rose from 50% to 53%. The balance in both years, 2%, is covered by "other."
New Jersey is described sometimes by "solar only" advocates thusly:
"New Jersey is now one of the leading states in the nation for solar..."
Here for instance is a marketing blurb from solar salesmen saying
exactly that:
http://www.powerlight.com/newjersey/index.shtmlBased on the marketing and hype - assuming that it isn't
fraudulent as in a lie, as in a misrepresentation, as in pure wishful thinking, as in a huge delusion, as in an alcoholic hallucination, we would assume that at least this "other" 2% would be PV solar energy. But we would be wrong if we so assumed.
In New Jersey, in order to make the claims of the so called "renewable" crowd look somewhat less pathetic and deluded, "waste incinerators" are defined as class II "renewable" energy sites:
"...Another supply side option is the replacement of fossil fuel electricity generation with a renewable energy source that has low or no mercury emissions. Class I renewable energy sources are defined in the Electric Discount and Energy Competition Act (Act) as photovoltaic, wind, wave, or tidal power, solar thermal electric, fuel cells, or geothermal. Class II renewable energy sources are municipal solid waste incinerators that generate electricity and hydroelectric electricity generation..."
http://www.state.nj.us/dep/dsr/Vol3-chapter3.pdfNew Jersey law, in typical "dump our empty promises on future generations" mandates that "The percentage increases to 6.5% in 2012 of which 2.5% is to be from Class I or Class II renewables and 4% is from Class I. Currently, New Jersey uses 68 million megawatt hours (million Mwh) of electricity yearly. Per the requirements of the Act, in 2012 approximately 2.7 million Mwh must be supplied by Class I renewables and 1.7 million Mwh must be supplied by Class I or II renewables."
Burn more garbage.
The garbage to energy industry - a fraud much older than PV electricity as it dates to the 19th century has run into some local opposition. Our neighbors in Delaware for instance have passed a law to make
wood waste burning incinerators illegal. It started with bits like this:
http://www.greendel.org/item.xhtml?name=alert_0029Speaking of wood, did you hear the joke about the ninth rate thinker who proposed in consumerist fashion that the solution to the fact that wood burning pollution is for everyone in New Jersey to buy a
new wood burning stove that reduces particulates to "EPA approved levels." Did you know that there are also "EPA approved levels of particulates from diesel engines?" Apparently in this alternate universe EPA approval is the same thing as rendering something safe, particulates that are EPA approved and get stuck in your lungs don't cause any injury whatsoever, because they're EPA approved. Of course, we don't even need to touch with someone else's lung tissue the rich spoiled brat argument that the solution to pollution is to
buy more shit.
Buy. Buy. Buy. I note that of the millions of people who die each year from inhaling "biomass" exhaust, very few of them are rich people who are deciding between a new catalytic wood stove and a trip to hurricane alley's Disneyworld. Some live in deforested countries like Nepal.
http://www.undp.org.np/news/news061.htm But, let's be clear.
The International Organization of Twit Empty Promises to Make Rich People Feel Less Guilty About Consumerism might as well be a unit of the Repuke party. Only idle rich boy solutions count.
Now let's turn to the schadenfreund prediction of anti-nuclear dopes who understand almost nothing about energy at all that a switch on the part of New Jerseyans from natural gas to electricity will cause New Jersey's power grid to collapse. In short, LET'S PLAY "DATA AND CALCULATION!"
Most people who are not twits know that in most places peak electrical demand is not associated with winter weather - it is associated with summer weather. It is true that electricity demand on particularly cold days in New Jersey and elsewhere does indeed increase, because many people already have electrical heat - irrespective of and predating the natural gas crisis. On January 23, 2003 for instance the PJM grid, which serves New Jersey, experienced a peak
winter electricity demand of 55,031 Megawatts, surpassing its old
winter record of 50,129 Megawatts set on January 27, 2000.
http://www.pjm.com/contributions/news-releases/2003/20030128-winter-peak-demand.pdfDid New Jersey's grid collapse? Not at all, because PJM's grid has experienced much higher demands
in summer. The all time summer demand on this grid was 63,777 megawatts. (It didn't collapse then either.) Now let's leave aside for the moment that the grid demand seems remarkably unaffected by the dorky empty promises of the distributed power PV solar power squad. Instead let's just calculate using the real magic of
subtraction what the reserve capacity of the PJM grid is as
experimentally determined by real
data. Ready? (Greenpeace members should run off to find someone who knows how to work a calculator or spreadsheet at this point.) 63,777 MW - 55,031 MW = 8,746 MW.
How much
power is represented by 8,746 MW? It's the equivalent of just less than 9 average sized nuclear plants, and it easily outstrips the entire solar PV capacity (measured in physicist watts and not in phony solar "peak bright sunny day under the best alignment conditions at noon 'watts'").
In New Jersey, the average home heated with natural gas - as my home is - burns about 1000 therms per year.
http://www.bpu.state.nj.us/reports/NJCEP2003AnnualReport.pdf">See the footnote on page 4.
A "Therm" is 100,000 Btu, or in SI units, 105.5 MJ.
http://bioenergy.ornl.gov/papers/misc/energy_conv.htmlNow we can calculate the average
power requirement for natural gas burning in New Jersey. 1000 Therms/year = 105.5 gigajoules/year. 105.5 gigajoules-yr(-1)/31,557600 sec-yr(-1) = 3.3 kW.
According to the US Census, which was last conducted when a sane person ran the government, 2000, the number of households in New Jersey is roughly 3.3 million.
http://www.wnjpin.state.nj.us/OneStopCareerCenter/LaborMarketInformation/lmi25/pl94/GCT.xlsHow much power would be represented by replacing all of the natural gas required by average New Jersey homes
if all of the New Jersey homes depended on natural gas for heat? 3.3 million X 3.3 kW = 11,000 Megawatts or slightly above the known reserve capacity of the PJM grid.
It is not true however that everyone in New Jersey is going to switch
all of their power demands from natural gas to electricity. In fact, not everybody uses natural gas in the first place. Many people actually have electric heat already. It's not too hard to afford; we're better than 50% nuclear. Other people use #2 heating oil. I'll bet there are at least 5 people in New Jersey who heat their homes with biodiesel.
While it has been stupidly suggested than when I said that I would put an electrical space heater
in our bedrooms at night to conserve natural gas and reduce my heating bills, that I was being an energy pig, what I actually indicated that I will be reducing my overall energy demand, since I will under these circumstances I will be able to turn down the thermostat in the rest of the house, which contains far more area than the three bedrooms that will be heated by the electrical space heaters. I can probably turn the thermostat down to 15C in the living room and not feel uncomfortable at all in my electrically heated bedroom. In this way, I will actually be consuming
less energy than if I simply blindly left the thermostat at a higher setting.
Oh well, if you don't know what the fuck you're talking about, if you're an admirer of Greenpeace fantasy, just make shit up.
The electrical grid will collapse...
:eyes:
Some people are apparently too dumb to even have a remote sense of exactly how dumb they sound. How exactly does one manage to say such stuff? Like I said, if one doesn't know what the fuck one is talking about, just make shit up. Maybe no one will notice.
I notice.
Many people, myself included, will of course continue to use our natural gas heaters for portions of the day. However it is clear that the higher prices will in fact induce
conservation which is, of course, a good thing, irrespective of what consumerist frauds try to tell you. I could of course go out and
buy a zone heating system for my house, but I'm not sure that the cost-benefit in either a financial or an environmental sense would represent any savings whatsoever. Consumerism involving the latest greatest toy is not really environmentalism. It's twittery.
The best thing I can do for the environment in my state actually on further reflection, is represented by using to the maximal extent our state's vast nuclear energy resources. An electric space heater heating a small localized space is the
best and most obvious way of doing this. I should have thought of it sooner, but I was lulled into complacency by absurdly low natural gas prices. This is a silver lining on the price increase. It makes people
think about energy. In spite of what mindless twits who are indifferent to global climate change tell you, the only
practical solution to making up for the fossil fuels that are rapidly being depleted is to use more nuclear energy.
I think I'll write my congressman to express this thought. He, of course, probably already knows this. He's a physicist. He used to run the Princeton Plasma Physics lab, a government laboratory for the development of fusion power, fusion power being a form of
nuclear energy.
Many people here know this, with the possible exception of Doug Forrester, the psychotic Repuke candidate for Governor here, who unlike John Corzine, opposes the license extension of Oyster Creek, our oldest and smallest nuclear reactor. Oyster Creek, which began operations in 1969, will have its license extended after 2009. It ran in 2003 at 98.9% of its full capacity and has been a very successful plant.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/nuclear/page/at_a_glance/reactors/oyster_creek.html