Discussion about this post

User's avatar
GerardW's avatar

I live in Virginia and thanks to the Virginia Clean Energy Act we are facing the same issues. Virginia does not have good wind resources, so growth of renewables is based on building 24 GW of solar. Virginia is proud of its rural countryside but no one has thought through the impact of 24 GW of utility solar farms. At 5 - 10 acres per MW of nameplate capacity these solar farms would cover 120,000 to 240,000 acres of land. That's one to two counties of Virginia completely covered in solar farms, feeder grids and long distance power lines from rural Virginia to Northern Virginia where the power is needed.

Of course nuclear is capped, and the dispatchable power of coal and NaturalGas, which generates two thirds of Virginia’s power has to be shut down.

Of course 24 GW of solar doesn’t meet Virginia’s need for power, so it is planning to import 11 GW of coal fired power from West Virginia- until that gets shut down by the Inflation Reduction Act.

Eventually you run out of other people’s electricity.

And as you say all this comes at a cost, with prices planning to rise by 66% by 2030 and double by 2035.

When will this nonsense stop.?

Expand full comment
Kilovar 1959's avatar

Joining that California/Hawaii club are a few fridgid weather states, Minnesota, Michigan, New York, and possibly Massachusetts. Winter blackouts in these states is not simply an inconvenience. No one in California or Hawaii is freezing to death without power. These far North states are a different matter.

Expand full comment
60 more comments...

No posts