CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2020, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BLACKOUT BLACKMAIL POSSIBLE IN AUGUST OUTAGES”
Never before in California’s long
experience with power blackouts have systematic, preplanned outages been as
short as the 20-minute to 30-minute electric shutdowns inflicted on about 3 million
homes and businesses around the state in mid-August.
Without doubt these blackouts were
pre-planned. “(We will have) excessive weather conditions and a persistent
shortage of electric supply for the California grid,” said a warning texted to
electric customers hours ahead of the first outages.
There was a lot odd about this, aside
from the short span of the blackouts. Gov. Gavin Newsom said later he didn’t learn
of the shutdowns until just beforehand, adding they were caused by record-level
heat. It’s unprecedented for any governor not to know well in advance. What’s
more, while temperatures set records in some places, it wasn’t by much – a degree or two more than in the late summers
of recent years.
And, as was noted on social media,
myriad California homes feature solar panels; schools and most power-using businesses
were closed due to the coronavirus pandemic. So why any shortage? Trying to blame
this on the gradual shift to renewable power from wind and sun, as President
Trump did, explained nothing.
What really went on? It’s hard to be certain, in
part because neither the Southern California Edison Co. nor the California
Independent System Operator (CalISO), which runs the state’s electric grid, answered
specific questions about how close to capacity several power plants operated during
the shortages. “This all looks highly suspicious,” said Bill Powers, a San
Diego engineer expert on utility operations.
The real cause of the problems that inconvenienced
some customers, but never enough to produce much lawsuit liability, may have
been a recent utility phenomenon known as “blackout blackmail.”
The Southern California Gas Co. used
this tactic several times in the last few years to keep its Aliso Canyon
natural gas storage facility open in the hills above the Porter Ranch area of
Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley.
It needs the gas storage, SoCalGas
claimed, to prevent blackouts in summer, when gas-fired power plants sometimes at
full strength. But most plants almost never approach capacity, and there were
no actual blackouts while Aliso Canyon was virtually empty after its massive
leaks starting in 2015.
So this was clearly blackmail, the
nation’s biggest gas utility trying to scare customers and politicians into
letting it keep a hazardous facility open.
The timing of the latest blackouts
suggests a different sort of possible blackmail. These outages began less than
three weeks before the state Water Resources Control Board is due in early
September to consider keeping open most of the generating units at four
gas-fired power plants cooled by Pacific Ocean water at Huntington Beach, Long
Beach, Redondo Beach and Ormond Beach near Oxnard.
All had been set to close by year’s
end, reducing greenhouse gases as part of California’s climate change strategy.
But the state Public Utilities Commission earlier this year okayed a reprieve,
moving plant closing dates back by anywhere from one to three years.
Together, affected units at the four facilities
can produce 3,812 megawatts, far more than enough to make up the stated
shortfall of less than 1,500 megawatts cited by CalISO during the blackouts.
One megawatt powers one home for about 15 months.
No one will say whether the four plants operated
near capacity on the blackout days. They usually run far below those levels: In
2018, the highest average load on any unit of the four plants was 10.1 percent of
capacity at Alamitos Unit 3 in Long Beach.
Edison, CalISO and the plants’ owners, Virginia-based
AES Corp. and Houston-based GenOn Energy Holdings, want the generating stations
left open. The PUC said OK, as it usually does when utilities want something.
Because no one can or will say whether these plants operated
near capacity before and during the latest outages, it’s impossible to be sure this
episode aimed to intimidate the water quality board, which has the final say.
That’s why it’s a good thing Newsom quickly ordered
an investigation, and why that investigation – unlike several others involving
the PUC – must actually go forward rather than dying out quietly.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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