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Climate Monitor


A weekly roundup of Maine's most urgent environmental and energy-related news from The Maine Monitor.

November 25, 2022

Credit Matthew T Rader Creative Commons

Power lines in snow are pictured in Texas. (Credit: Matthew T. Rader, Creative Commons)

Dire warnings about winter power grid reliability

By Annie Ropeik

 

A new report from a national power grid watchdog hones in on New England as a hotspot for potential reliability woes if the coming winter turns extreme.


The North American Electric Reliability Corporation, or NERC, warned that limited fuel supplies and other challenges in the Northeast, South and Midwest could spell disruption in the event of an extended cold snap. One official called the situation the report describes "unprecedented," according to Utility Dive.


We've heard these warnings before — from our region's grid operator ISO-New England (ISO-NE), and from utilities and energy companies. The energy crisis in Texas amid a historic deep freeze early last year prompted a paradigm shift, regulators said at the time. "What happened in Texas changed everything," ISO-NE CEO Gordon van Welie said on a press call around this time last year.


These dire warnings did not come true last winter, but the geopolitical situation is very different this year. Fossil fuel markets worldwide have been unsettled by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, creating particularly vulnerable conditions in parts of the U.S. like New England. Here, natural gas is the largest fuel source for the electric grid and a growing number of homes (less so in Maine, which mostly uses oil), but pipeline and distribution capacity remains limited. And long spells of exceptional cold are always possible.


"While New England expects to have sufficient energy during a mild or moderate winter, reliability risk is elevated during a period of extended extreme cold conditions," says the NERC report. "Oil reserves are below normal levels. During extreme cold, switching fuel types is not always successful."


There's perennial debate in this arena about whether renewable energy helps or hurts reliability during extreme weather. The very good news is this: Wind, sun and to some extent water are in free and endless supply, not subject to the geopolitical pressures of oil, coal and gas. And the distributed, localized, flexible systems that increasingly connect these renewable resources to the grid have been shown to help improve resiliency during extreme weather, per a Dartmouth study I covered for New Hampshire Public Radio last year.


More utility-scale energy storage will be a further game-changer in the coming years — but for now, power from the wind and sun must be used essentially at the same time as it's generated, limiting its impact as a back-up to scant fossil fuel supplies. Hydropower is a little different, as dams can and do open or close at different times of day depending on demand. This may be one reason van Welie, the ISO-NE CEO, said at this time last year that new resources like the stalled CMP corridor power line to Hydro-Quebec dams would ease his mind.


It's interesting to look back at that story I wrote for Spectrum News Maine about van Welie's comments in December 2021. So much of the narrative was the same as this year's, months before the start of war in Ukraine, before sky-high inflation, et cetera. We now know that we did not see a cold snap last year that would have forced New England to tap into oil reserves, call for energy conservation measures or even impose the ever-feared rolling blackouts.


The forecast for this winter, like last, is milder than usual — in line with the warming trends of climate change, driven by this same fossil fuel use. But our warming climate is also more volatile, prone to new extremes in both hot and cold directions, as Texas saw in its frozen-grid catastrophe last year.


This is the paradox at work when we debate how to shore up our power grid for weather that is growing increasingly unpredictable due to the planet-warming fuels we use to run that same grid. Talking about the NERC report at an industry conference, one official said it raised concerns about the pace of coal plant retirements in some states, and underscored the need for "dispatchable and flexible resources" like natural gas, Utility Dive also reported.


But in New England, reliance on oil and gas is one of the big problems this year. And the last time regulators' cold snap fears came true — in January 2018 — we nearly burned through our reserves of oil. Seared into my mind is a statistic I heard at a utilities conference some months later, which suggested the emissions from that emergency use of oil (and coal) canceled out much of the climate benefits of all the solar installed in Massachusetts for that year.


This winter, with more uncertainty than ever — but more renewables online than ever, too — we can only keep an eye on the forecast to know what kind of climate and energy trade-offs may be coming down the pipe.

A quick follow-up on last week's emissions data analysis

By Annie Ropeik

 

In last Friday's edition of this newsletter, I broke down data from the nonprofit Climate TRACE and U.S. Energy Information Administration to see the top greenhouse gas emitters across Maine. A helpful reader in Saco (thank you, Cathy!) followed up with some interesting demographic analysis. We compared the population and square mileage of each county to the total emissions of the facilities and sources analyzed there.


Cumberland County is the most populous in Maine, and has the greatest emissions per square mile in our analysis. But Oxford County ranked first in emissions per capita, entirely -- in terms of emissions sources analyzed by Climate TRACE and the EIA -- because of power usage at the NP Paper mill.


Tiny Knox County, meanwhile, ranked high on emissions per square mile because it's home to the Dragon Products cement plant in Thomaston, one of the top emitters on the list. And Franklin County is one of the least populous in the state, but had high emissions per capita and per square mile thanks again to a paper mill -- the Pixelle facility in Jay that is soon slated to close.


Cathy, the reader who helped with this analysis, happens to have a background in air emissions analysis, and noted that county rankings don't actually give us a very complex or subtle view of this data. More important, she said, would be how these emissions move from the facilities that put them out -- in directional plumes or streams that put the brunt of health effects on folks living in certain places nearby. These patterns depend on technology, designs and operations protocols at the emitting facilities, raising many more questions for neighbors.


And since we know people of color and low-income folks are disproportionately affected by pollution, I hope there's more analysis we can do in future about the potential environmental injustices of how Maine's top polluters are distributed.


A few more things we're reading...


Plus, check back this Sunday for an update to The Maine Monitor's ongoing series on PFAS chemicals, "Invisible and Indestructible."

In other Maine news:


3D printing:

The University of Maine 3D-printed a home using "wood flour," a residual bio-material, offering a potential affordable housing solution.


Wind:

State officials toured sites that could host a proposed future offshore wind construction hub in Searsport.


Electric rates:

Learn more about what's behind the increased energy costs on the way to your utility bills this season.


Lobster:

Whole Foods will pause sales of Maine lobster after the fishery lost another big sustainability certification. Meanwhile, a court extended the federal timeline for new gear rules aimed at protecting endangered right whales.

 

Landfill:

A scrap metal company wants to make a deal with Bucksport to reopen a dormant dump at a former paper mill.


Biomass:

Another old mill, in Millinocket, is slated to reopen as a factory for wood pellets that would be moved by rail and shipped overseas.

 

Clams:

Brunswick will buy and protect a coastal area that had been eyed for housing development after a die-off of clams.


Beaches: 

Groups are buying shoreline areas to keep open to the public as a way to ensure beach access between private lots.


Seals:

Researchers are using facial recognition technology on seals in Casco Bay.


Turkeys!

Research from the University of Maine looked at how wild turkeys might adapt to changing winter weather patterns.

Thanks for reading. See you next week.


Annie Ropeik is a freelance environmental reporter based in Portland. She spent about a decade as an award-winning public radio reporter, including with New Hampshire Public Radio, and later worked for Spectrum News Maine. She is now the assistant director of the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk and a board member with the Society of Environmental Journalists. You can reach her at aropeik@gmail.com or @aropeik, or at her website.


Kate Cough will return to Climate Monitor in December.

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