Comment by friend_and_foe

2 years ago

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/oct/06/how-would-t...

Well when I say regular or normal, I don't mean an 80° sunny day, I mean one standard deviation from the mean. They take extremes into account, you can't take unprecedented extremes into account, by definition. It gets hot, and it gets cold, and the grid is fine. If the entire state of Nevada had a giant ice storm that covered nearly the whole state, I highly doubt that their grid integrated with the rest of their region would be able to handle it. Shit, California can't even do it on a good day.

Have you been to other parts of the world? Outside of Europe and the US, and a few recently well developed countries in southeast Asia, rolling blackouts are par for the course. I've spent 6 straight days without electricity before in a developing country, without any extreme weather event. Grids are hard to manage.