That may change in some areas.I do agree the grid is the bigger problem vs production, Industrialized America ran on coal. Its been a long time since we did that. Most of those plants have been closed or converted.
That may change in some areas.I do agree the grid is the bigger problem vs production, Industrialized America ran on coal. Its been a long time since we did that. Most of those plants have been closed or converted.
So your thinking were firing those plants back up? Or are you saying something else?That may change in some areas.
The article I saw was discussing building new plants in some states.So your thinking were firing those plants back up? Or are you saying something else?
I do think China builds a coal plant a week - or were. So if you want to compete.
I struggle with how this works out - because you start building things and the laws revert back in a few years so no private investors would be likely to do it. Maybe Microsoft would but seems foolish even for them?The article I saw was discussing building new plants in some states.
I struggle with how this works out - because you start building things and the laws revert back in a few years so no private investors would be likely to do it. Maybe Microsoft would but seems foolish even for them?
It's a hype, no one is going to replace a decommissioned nuclear plant for this. They are in Wisconsin for the water availability.Microsoft is building two data centers in Southeastern Wisconsin and they are looking at replacing a decommissioned nuclear plant in order to meet the anticipated demand.
There are tons of private energy producers already. So not new. Might become more of course.I think MS would have the capital if they wanted to see it completed. It might actually be the start of companies privatizing energy production.
Which may be the case. However I was addressing your statement that “we” have sufficient reserve capacity without new generating facilities, which isn’t the case in Wisconsin.It's a hype, no one is going to replace a decommissioned nuclear plant for this. They are in Wisconsin for the water availability.
Yes, there have been a lot of power deals in the datacenter industry lately. The datacenter vendors have seen the writing on the wall. They know that on some level they will need to generate at least some of their own power.Perhaps you do, wherever you are at. But "we" don't here in Wisconsin, nor do our transmission lines allow for that type of expansion. Microsoft is building two data centers in Southeastern Wisconsin and they are looking at replacing a decommissioned nuclear plant in order to meet the anticipated demand.
And cooler weather. Microsoft told us on our tour that they want to build datacenters with passive cooling.It's a hype, no one is going to replace a decommissioned nuclear plant for this. They are in Wisconsin for the water availability.
I have never lived somewhere that had residential electricity prices be time of day dependent.Don't most people charge their EVs overnight when the rates are low? Asking for a friend...
I was actually thinking about grid demand. But yeah, time of use is big around here. Of course, my electricity bill is peanuts because I make use of that big nuclear reactor up in the sky. Such a deal!I have never lived somewhere that had residential electricity prices be time of day dependent.
I have and also where I am currently living. They will charge two different rates based on "Peak Demand" hours and "Off Peak Demand" hours. For residential, most peak demand hours are from 2pm to 9pmI have never lived somewhere that had residential electricity prices be time of day dependent.
Were the panels free to start with?I was actually thinking about grid demand. But yeah, time of use is big around here. Of course, my electricity bill is peanuts because I make use of that big nuclear reactor up in the sky. Such a deal!
I know there are places. The question was don't most people charge off peak. And the answer is "it depends on where you live". I am sure those here just plug in whenever.I have and also where I am currently living. They will charge two different rates based on "Peak Demand" hours and "Off Peak Demand" hours. For residential, most peak demand hours are from 2pm to 9pm
Of course not. The solar project, which included a full re-roof, was an investment with an expected return. I considered solar for over 5 years before inking the deal. The numbers made the investment the biggest no-brainer in the world. And I got a nice big fat tax credit!Were the panels free to start with?