No, the OP was not complaining about Australia. The OP (that would be me) shared an article on an unintended consequence of an apparent solar power win – 100% powering of the grid by home solar installations. Yes, this happened in Australia, but it could happen anywhere as adoption of alternative power sources increases. The sooner we plan for this eventuality and devise methods to solve the control and backup reserve issues, the better.
This is nothing new in the USA. We have excess RE energy here most years.
BPA Stops Wind Power Generation For The First Time In 4 Years
Too much water and too much wind are a bad combination for power suppliers. Now, officials are forcing wind farms to shut down for the first time in four years. This year, there's more to the story.
www.opb.org
Northwest rivers are running high as all that winter snowpack melts into spring runoff.
And that means the region is producing too much of a good thing: carbon-free, renewable energy in the form of both dam-generated hydropower along with electricity from spinning wind-farm turbines.
That's prompted the federal government to take an action it avoided during the last four years of drought conditions: shutting down wind power.
That's something the Bonneville Power Administration did each spring from 2010 to 2012, before more recent drought conditions kept rivers running so low that there was plenty of capacity on the power grid for all the electricity that Northwest wind farms could generate.
But there's one big difference between this spring and the region's pre-drought years: California's increasing supply of solar power.
Electricity suppliers in the Northwest used to sell a lot of their carbon-free energy from wind and hydroelectric dams to California to help it meet its renewable energy goals. But now, with more solar on the grid, California's not buying as much of the Northwest's surplus.