• Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DCMA
  • Sitemap
  • Submit
Regional Posts
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World
Regional Posts
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World
No Result
View All Result
Regional Posts
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

Spikes in Air Conditioning Use with Warming Could Tax Electric Grid

by Staff Writer
February 8, 2022
in Science
0
Spikes in Air Conditioning Use with Warming Could Tax Electric Grid
552
SHARES
3.7k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Higher temperatures with climate change will push up demand for air conditioning significantly in some states, potentially taxing electric grids, a new analysis said.

READ ALSO

WHO monkeypox decision renews debate about global alarm system for outbreaks | Science

25 Best Puppy Dog Foods in 2022

Demand in some parts of the United States could rise more than 13 percent, according to the studypublished in Earth’s Future, the American Geophysical Union’s journal.

“We know that when it gets warmer out, we use more air conditioning and know that climate change is going to lead to higher temperatures, particularly in the summer,” Renee Obringer, the lead author and an assistant professor at Penn State University, said in an interview. “What we were interested in is what this increase in temperature might mean for local households,” as well as comparing “across states or across regions.”

The research comes at a time when higher temperatures already have been linked to increasing numbers of deaths in some states. California death certificates blame heat for 599 deaths between 2010 and 2019, the hottest decade on record, said a Los Angeles Times investigation. But the newspaper said the true toll is probably six times higher at about 3,900 deaths.

Last summer, when a heat wave hit multiple Western states, the temperature hit 117 degrees Fahrenheit in Salem, Ore., and 121 degrees in Lytton, a village northeast of British Columbia. California’s Death Valley reached 130 F, matching a high set in August 2020.

The study in Earth’s Future used data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration showing electricity use for air conditioning between 2005 and 2019. The analysis projected changing usage from climate influence. It did not factor in possible population increases, changes in wealth or other factors known to affect air conditioning demand.

It also did not look specifically at the impact on electrical grids, but a statement on the study warned that “without enough capacity to meet demand, energy utilities may have to stage rolling blackouts during heat waves to avoid grid failure, like California’s energy providers did in August 2020 during an extended period of record heat sometimes topping 117 degrees Fahrenheit.”

Those rolling blackouts lasted a few hours on a Saturday evening and a short period the next evening, with most homes losing power for an hour or two.

The analysis said Arizona, several Southern states and places like West Virginia could potentially see the biggest jumps in demand for air conditioning as the earth warms by 1.5 degrees Celsius, or about 2.7 F. That’s predicted to happen by the end of the decade globally.

The region of Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana could see a 7 percent jump in demand for electricity for air conditioning, it said, Arizona’s would rise 6.1 percent. The Atlantic coast also would see a jump, with demand projected to rise 7.4 percent in Virginia and West Virginia, and 7.5 percent in New Jersey.

A global 2 C jump — about 3.6 F — will boost demand for air conditioning most significantly in Midwestern states, the study said.

The analysis projects consumption would jump between 13 percent and 13.7 percent in Missouri, Illinois and Ohio, while rising 12.4 percent in Michigan.

“So in Indiana and Ohio, we’re seeing about a 4 percent increase in air conditioning use after 1.5 degrees [C] of warming,” Obringer said. “But after just 2 degrees [C] of warming, so another half degree above that” 1.5 C, she said, and air conditioning demand jumps to more than three times as much.

Any electrical grid failures are likely to affect vulnerable populations — including those with low income, people of color and older residents — first, Obringer added.

Adaptation measures already underway

But Daniel Matisoff, director of the Sustainable Energy and Environmental Management master’s program at Georgia Tech, said it’s important to note the study is narrowly focused. It does not look at population and “the biggest driver of increased demand in the annual electricity outlook is actually population growth.”

Also, he said, electrical systems are adapting to deal with climate change and its impacts.

Those include “demand side management, and the ability for utilities to manage the load,” with lower rates for electricity consumers who agree to allow their service to get turned off during peak demand periods, Matisoff said.

“The second thing they miss is increasing growth in solar power,” which provides supplies during the daytime, he said of the study. And “as you ramp up the amount of solar on the electricity system, that peak hours actually shift” to the early evening.

That’s already happened in California, with so much solar power during the day that large producers are sometimes asked to stop generating. Peak demand now is often in the early evenings.

With higher temperatures, there also are options like large commercial buildings that can make ice at night and deploy that during a hot day when electricity prices go up, Matisoff said.

“We are starting to learn and I think are increasingly learning how to create electricity systems that are resilient to these changes, so that we can operate our grid more efficiently and be more resilient to heat waves and cold spells,” Matisoff said.

He also noted that Texas — where the grid failed for millions of people during a winter storm last year — and California have deregulated markets where electricity providers bid into the marketplace for the “reserves,” or backup supplies. But in a state like Georgia, utilities build in a reserve margin and have the ability to ramp electricity supplies up or down quickly.

Reprinted from E&E News with permission from POLITICO, LLC. Copyright 2022. E&E News provides essential news for energy and environment professionals.

Source by www.scientificamerican.com

Share221Tweet138
Previous Post

NATO predicts chances of Russian invasion in Baltics — RT Russia & Former Soviet Union

Next Post

Dell Chromebook 11 3180 Review: Affordable And Robust

Related Posts

United Airlines to Launch Flights to Amman, Jordan
Science

WHO monkeypox decision renews debate about global alarm system for outbreaks | Science

June 30, 2022
image001
Science

25 Best Puppy Dog Foods in 2022

June 30, 2022
Good News! The Solar System Is Going to Hold Together For Now
Science

Good News! The Solar System Is Going to Hold Together For Now

June 29, 2022
AI that detects chicken distress calls could improve farm conditions
Science

AI that detects chicken distress calls could improve farm conditions

June 29, 2022
NASA's Tiny CAPSTONE CubeSat Launches on Pioneering Moon Mission
Science

NASA’s Tiny CAPSTONE CubeSat Launches on Pioneering Moon Mission

June 29, 2022
Here’s what we know right now about getting COVID-19 again
Science

Here’s what we know right now about getting COVID-19 again

June 28, 2022

POPULAR NEWS

5 Email Templates For a Performance Management Process

5 Email Templates For a Performance Management Process

November 1, 2021
Florida Tik Tok star Damaury Mikula, 18, was arrested on Friday after he led Pasco County Police on a 100-mile-per-hour high speed chase

Florida TikTok star, 18, is arrested provoking police into high speed chase

November 1, 2021
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle havey shown the first photo of their daughter Lilibet Diana, six months after she was born, and fans have gone wild over Archie's red hair (seen left)

Prince and Meghan Markle show baby Lilibet’s face – and Archie has red hair

December 24, 2021
sex

How To Increase Male And Female Sexual Desire

November 26, 2021
The Best New Podcasts Coming in 2022

The Best New Podcasts Coming in 2022

December 30, 2021

EDITOR'S PICK

Aviation startup ZeroAvia, backed by Amazon and Alaska Air, is building an R&D center near Seattle

Aviation startup ZeroAvia, backed by Amazon and Alaska Air, is building an R&D center near Seattle

January 11, 2022
Why People Are Acting So Weird

Why People Are Acting So Weird

April 1, 2022
10 Ways to Fix SharePlay Not Working in FaceTime on iPhone

10 Ways to Fix SharePlay Not Working in FaceTime on iPhone

January 7, 2022
Kemar Roofe's extra-time goal set up a semi-final tie with Leipzig

Rangers 3-1 Braga (3-2 agg): Kemar Roofe extra-time winners puts Scots into semi-final

April 15, 2022

About

REGIONAL POSTS Web Magazine is an online magazine covering international news, politics, technology, health, education, and much more.Read More.

Follow Us

Submit a News | Write For Us

Feel free to contact us for submission queries. via contact form or email us at : [email protected]

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DCMA
  • Sitemap
  • Submit

© 2021 Regionalposts.com

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Sports
    • Politics
  • Business
    • Crypto
    • Marketing
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Food
  • Tech
    • Gaming
    • Gadgets
  • Science
  • Health
  • Travel
  • World

© 2021 Regionalposts.com