Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumPNNL: "Energy Droughts" in Wind and Solar Can Last Nearly a Week, Research Shows
December 11, 2023
Energy Droughts in Wind and Solar Can Last Nearly a Week, Research Shows
JoAnna Wendel, PNNL
Solar and wind power may be free, renewable fuels, but they also depend on natural processes that humans cannot control. Its one thing to acknowledge the risks that come with renewable energy: the sun doesnt always shine and the wind doesnt always blow, but what happens when the grid loses both of these energy sources at the same time?
This phenomenon is known as a compound energy drought. In a new paper, researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) found that in some parts of the country, these energy droughts can last nearly a week.
When we have a completely decarbonized grid and depend heavily on solar and wind, energy droughts could have huge amounts of impact on the grid, said Cameron Bracken, an Earth scientist at PNNL and lead author on the paper. Grid operators need to know when energy droughts will occur so they can prepare to pull energy from different sources. On top of that, understanding where, when, and for how long energy droughts occur will help experts manage grid-level battery systems that can store enough electricity to deploy during times when energy is needed most.
The team published the findings October 31 in the journal Renewable Energy and will be presenting at this weeks annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
lapfog_1
(30,147 posts)is not a problem so long as we are working on even more alternatives. Natural gas power could also be used as "peaker" power when energy demands are very high... so long as the base load is either nuclear (existing, new plants take too long to license, etc), hydropower, or renewables.
That or distributed battery storage of one kind or another. Doesn't have to be chemical batteries.
Think. Again.
(17,931 posts)...energy storage has always been known to be a needed component of wind or solar.
It's a similar challenge as to when fossil fuel energy plants go offline due to accidents, extreme weather, or whatever. The real challenge is getting the non-CO2 emitting plants built in the first place.