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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday January 30 2019, @02:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the using-larger-fonts dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

PG&E files for bankruptcy. Here's why that could mean bigger electricity bills

PG&E Corp., which owns California's largest electric utility, filed for bankruptcy protection Tuesday in anticipation of huge legal claims, starting an unpredictable process that could take years to resolve and is likely to result in higher energy bills for the millions of Californians who depend on Pacific Gas & Electric for power.

PG&E said a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, which allows the company to continue operating while it comes up with a plan to pay its debts, was the only way to deal with billions of dollars in potential liabilities from a series of deadly wildfires, many of which were sparked by the company's power grid infrastructure.

"Through this process, we will prioritize what matters most to our customers and the communities we serve — safety and reliability," interim Chief Executive John R. Simon said in a statement. "We believe that this process will make sure that we have sufficient liquidity to serve our customers and support our operations and obligations."

Energy experts say PG&E's rates probably will increase when the utility emerges from Chapter 11 protection because bankruptcy inevitably makes it more expensive for a company to borrow money and creates large legal and other bankruptcy-related costs. The utility passes such expenses along to its customers.

"It's almost impossible to see a way out of this that doesn't have some short-term cost increases," Ralph Cavanagh, co-director of the energy program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a recent interview.


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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday January 30 2019, @11:57PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Wednesday January 30 2019, @11:57PM (#794293) Journal

    The current energy market assumes one of three traditional categories: base load, load following, peaking. Currently energy demand function is essentially sinusoidal with period of one day with a bunch of noise. Solar and wind production functions do not match demand function.

    That's more true of wind than solar. Solar produces best during the hours of peak demand. Germany's Energiewende has amply demonstrated this; the installed solar has already lopped off the profitable portion of the curve for the utilities. The utilities are stuck with the baseload in the overnight when they operate in the red, according to spot prices.

    As for storage, battery backups will become more common as the battery tech improves and as sources of electricity switch to renewables. Tesla already installed a battery backup system for a utility in Australia, I believe, so there's a precedent now.

    Failures will be much less catastrophic with massively distributed power generation. Smart switches are an option for households that want to retain a grid tie. Micro-grids are an option for neighborhoods or towns that want to go co-op style.

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.
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