Catweazle wrote:Roger Adair wrote:I repeat once again that I would really like to hear some workable ideas as to how to run an electricity grid system mainly with intermittent renewables and no base load generating plant,
Tides are reliable, perhaps a few large tidal projects could fill in the gaps.
Tidal barrage can be operated to provide firm base load. The Severn Barrage has been modelled to deliver 1.6 GW of firm capacity, even during neap tides. (You could, of course, operate it in other ways and thus make it provide ancilliary services such as response and reserve, and mix and match these with baseload).
A London Barrage could be operated in a similar manner, but the output would be less.
Both would also provide tangible secondary benefits such as communication links and flood mitigation (especially important in the case of London).
From what I can see of the economics, both of these would provide cheaper electricity than windmills. And they'd last centuries (civil works only, but the mechanical plant can be upgraded on a rolling basis).
And of course, offer many good quality jobs for a decade during which economic diificulties perhaps force unemployment elsewhere.
But then, tidal barrage is not liked by the greenies . . .
And this is not going to solve the immediate supply problem created by the LCPD, plant ageing, and Germany's silly abandonment of nuclear because a barrage would take too long to build.
Given that 15 GW of generation is - supposed - to vanish by 2015, there's no chance that any scheme of renewables will fill the gap - 20,000 windmills anyone?
My guess is that the issue will have to be dodged. The LCPD can go hang (mitigated by the force majeur of Germany) and we'll build lots of gas stations JIT (we're building 7 GW now). It's that, or the lights go out; can you imagine the refrigeration crisis that would cause in supermarkets, hospitals, etc?