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OH NO!!!! Americans using less electricity!!!!

November 24th, 2008 · 2 Comments

That might as well be the title of the Wall Street Journal article Surprise Drop in Power Use Delivers Jolt to Utilities.

An unexpected drop in U.S. electricity consumption has utility companies worried that the trend isn’t a byproduct of the economic downturn, and could reflect a permanent shift in consumption that will require sweeping change in their industry.

OH NO!!!! Americans using less electricity and this might be something permanent rather than simply a lousy economy.

Now, as for the ‘lousy economy’, as we have yet to hit bottom and have a long way to go, hard to assert (yet) that it is not economic distress that is driving reduced energy use. Perhaps people are ‘turning off lights’ to save pennies in the face of economic distress. And, patterns begun in economic turmoil could become life’s new patterns. Thus, unlike what the Wall Street Journal’s coverage might suggest, there is much to hope for as to a start in a shifting of American culture toward more energy efficient patterns.

Most utilities plan around an assumption of rather constant an predictable electricity-demand growth curves. This provides “certainty” of planning for generating facilities and other capital investment. Introducing energy conservation and energy efficiency into the equation can threaten these plans.

Households are considered “the most stable group of consumers,” thus drops in household demand executive attention.

Dick Kelly, chief executive of Xcel Energy Inc., Minneapolis, says his company, which has utilities in Colorado and Minnesota, saw home-energy use drop 3% in the period from August through September, “the first time in 40 years I’ve seen a decline in sales” to homes.

No, it isn’t foreclosures according to Kelly. Three percent drop in one year: that could be simply through the introduction of CFLs. And, let us be clear, Obama’s green stimulus package could drive these reductions across the broader society.

It isn’t isolated to Xcel Energy.

Duke Energy Corp.’s third-quarter electricity sales were down 5.9% in the Midwest from the year earlier, including a 9% drop among residential customers. At its utilities operating in the Carolinas, sales were down 4.3% for the three-month period ending Sept. 30 from a year earlier.

American Electric Power Co., which owns utilities operating in 11 states, saw total electricity consumption drop 3.3% in the same period from the prior year. Among residential customers, the drop was 7.2%. However, milder weather played a role.

There is a debate in the industry as to the driving factor: ‘simply’ a bad economy or, again, a fundamental change. If we are to have hopes in relation to Global Warming, we should hope that it is the second, that people are learning, changing, and applying that learning to help solve real problems.

Again, there is a real problem here for the WSJ.

Michael Morris, the chief executive of AEP, one of the country’s largest utilities, says he thinks the industry should to be wary about breaking ground on expensive new projects. “The message is: be cautious about what you build because you may not have the demand” to justify the expense, he says.

Conservation and efficiency are not good for expanision plans.

Contemplating implications …

This Wall Street Journal article simply doesn’t mention any non-expansion planning implications, looking at this issue from a very narrow (not unimportant, but narrow) perspective. Here are some additional elements to consider:

Improving Energy Efficiency. The #1 near-term answer, across the entire economy, to our energy and environmental challenges is reducing inefficiences (waste) in energy use both through changed behavior (‘conservation’) and introduction of energy saving technologies/designs. This is both to ‘turn out the lights’ when not using them and changing the lights from incandescents to compact-fluorescent bulbs. These are ‘negawatts’. Quite roughly, electricity delivered to the customer in the United States costs about 9.5 cents per kilowatt hour (KwH). Study after study, real-world effort after real-world effort highlights that energy efficiency can cut demand by 20+% at prices just a fraction of that (with a wide-range of opportunities if priced at, let us say, 4 cents per KwH). Could the reduction that utilities be seeing be a leading edge of both changed behavior and energy efficiency penetrating into the general public and general use?

What will happen with focused leadership? These reductions have occurred amid economic malaise and generalized discussion of global warming/energy issues/reduction of waste. While the Republicans dismissed (actually, ‘dissed’) President-Elect Obama’s discussion of energy efficiency during the campaign (especially related to inflating tires as a path to reduce gasoline use, and therefore cost, immediately), perhaps this sort of message (from Obama, state and local politicians, prominent figures, religious leaders, etc) has taken root with enough of the population to begin to impact aggregate levels of energy use. What might happen if, as seems likely at this time, President Obama takes the bully pulpit to encourage all Americans to pursue “energy efficiency in your lives, homes, and businesses”? Will the reductions this article discusses simply be a bow wave of massive reductions in the coming few years? What does this say about the ability to eliminate coal from our electrical grid?

Global Warming implications. This article doesn’t point out that the 50% of American electricity coming from coal (and, to a lesser extent, the 22% coming from natural gas) are the largest single contributor to US GHG emissions. (As well as mercury and other pollution.) Cutting into US electrical demand, with the ‘non-produced’ (shut off) power principally from coal-fired plants, is one of the paths toward significant near-term reversal of growing US GHG emissions.

Thus, perhaps the most interesting things from this article, beyond the facts of reduced household electrical use, are not what it discusses but what it doesn’t discuss.

Tags: electricity · Energy

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Electricity use falling? // Jan 19, 2009 at 5:31 am

    […] though not everyone is enthused (think falling utility and coal industry profits), that is a combination that we could actually […]

  • 2 Ray // Jul 7, 2012 at 9:15 pm

    How our world can use 50% less electricity:

    Double the alternating current’s frequency, then half-wave rectify it at the last distribution point before the consumer. The consumer will receive rapidly pulsed, turned on and off electricity. This on and off pulsing, of their electricity, uses 50% less electricity. This means that the electricity generation power plants can be running 50% less, which means less pollution. It should also mean a 50% smaller electric bill.

    There are several ways to convert alternating current to pulsed current, which will use 50% less electricity, and will cause much less pollution.

    There are three current types: direct current, alternating current, and pulsed current. Pulsed current uses 50% less electricity.