Quick (chart) thread on Ercot generation during the power outages.
Can't recall who made this plot, but it's excellent (albeit without y-axes!!).
Changes over time are informative, but not the whole story.
In terms of how each fuel type performed, we not only want to judge its absolute production, but also relative to what was expected of it.
Ercot did a Winter 2020/21 resource adequacy assessment in November and came up with the following:
67GW thermal+hydro
7GW wind
0.3GW solar
They also ran "risk scenarios", essentially more thermal outages or less wind. Interestingly they didn't run the extreme forced thermal outage *AND* the extreme low wind scenario together!
So we can plot the performance of each generation fuel type in Texas both in absolute hourly MW, and relative to their expected (black dashed line) and extreme case capacity (red dashed line).
Note: I'm using a 4-day period for the outages, shown in grey.
We can look closer at each fuel type and see how they performed relative to their *expected* and *extreme case* scenarios. Note: I'm allocating thermal outage risk scenarios proportionally by capacity.
Here's coal. Underperformed even the extreme scenario by 28%.
Here's natural gas. Also significant underperformance relative to expected and extreme. In terms of MW magnitude of deviation, NG was the largest.
The absolute response of NG leading up to the power outages is great, but was expected and counted on.
Here's nuclear. Bravo nuclear. With one reactor tripping it was inline with the extreme scenario.
Here's wind. Expected capacity was 7GW. Average 3800MW through the event. Grossly underperformed expected, but significantly beat Ercot's SARA extreme case scenario (1791MW).
Finally, solar. Wasn't counted on to produce much and more than doubled that. Part of the issue here is likely unexpected growth in solar installations. Solar was perhaps the one bright spot (no pun intended) in the generation landscape last week.
Darn it. There's always a typo. Or in my case a completely wrong chart.
Here's the *correct* coal chart. Many thanks @whgorman for spotting the error.
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The AB govt has issued its "Rate of Last Resort" regulations. These amend how the default rate for electricity consumers in Alberta that don't opt for a competitive (fixed or floating) rate is set.
Let's take a look at the details... 🧵 #ableg #abpower
First, what is the "RoLR"?
It replaces the "RRO" as the default rate for Albertans who don't select a competitive plan.
The big change: Rather than being set monthly, the rate will be fixed for 2 years. The idea is to provide more stability, less volatility.
The RoLR is meant to be stable, remaining fixed for 2 years, with a maximum 10% adjustment into the next 2 year period. But wait...
Second, the "fixed vs float" decision has switched.
Going forward, floating prices (based on forward RRO markets) look cheaper than current fixed offers.
And if you're on a market floating plan, i.e. not the "RRO", you'll avoid the ~3c "cap adder" for the balance of 2024.
Of course the caveats: lots can change, floating is volatile, this isn't advice, yadda yadda
I do expect low prices to lead to retirements, which should raise prices again. But if that happens, you can switch back to fixed as most retailers are slow to update their offers.
Today the AB govt announced changes to the default "Regulated Rate Option", including a name change ("Rate of Last Resort!") and moving from monthly pricing to 2-year fixed price terms.
Some initial thoughts from someone who has followed this closely for a while (me, i mean me):
First, i'll acknowledge the good intentions.
- the name has always misleading suggested stability, when it's not at all stable
- trying to create more stability to default plans is a good thing for the many Albertans who don't have the time nor interest to shop for better rates
But ... some critiques:
1. Timing
Making these changes now, especially in the name of affordability, is a little like showing up to a streetfight and telling your bloodied friend: "i've got your back!"
It's too late. The crisis has passed. The time for changes was 3 years ago.
Some thoughts on a wild night for Alberta power yesterday…
[thread]
First, @theAESO operators deserve a shout out. They managed the grid smoothly through a tense situation.
Also, HUGE shout out to the thermal fleet operators. Only 1 plant (Milner) tripped during this cold snap. That’s incredible performance given the conditions.
Second, the emergency alert looks to have triggered a 150MW response. That’s inline per capita with the 2100MW Cali got from a similar event in 2022. Well done, Albertans. This highlights the capability of demand flexibility but emergency alerts are not a sustainable solution.
For those wondering how long this might last, expect the emergency alert to continue until at least 10pm, if not later if we see another plant go offline
Milner is still struggling to get back online and wind remains very low. Also BC imports are 1/4 of yesterday’s.
Load (demand) falls from here. The only question is whether we don’t see a plant trip. There’s nothing left in the AB supply stack to call on right now and looks like reserves are being fully dispatched.