“Low
on natural gas. Low on fresh water. Do you think there might be a
connection????
“Infinite
growth is not possible on a finite planet.”
---Mike
Ruppert
Low
on natural gas, California told to power down
Water
isn't the only resource running short in California. The
drought-stricken state is also low on natural gas
7
February, 2014
.
With
a move that usually comes in the height of summer when temperatures
are soaring and air conditioners blasting, Californians were urged to
voluntarily cut their electricity use after frigid weather across the
U.S. and Canada caused a shortage of natural gas at Southern
California power plants.
The
so-called Flex Alert, in which residents are asked to turn off
unneeded lights, avoid using large appliances or equipment, and turn
off electrically powered heaters, was allowed to expire at 10 p.m.
Thursday, nine hours after it began.
The
shortage was only in Southern California, but the north was asked to
do its part too.
"Statewide
electricity and gas conservation will help free up both electricity
and gas supplies for Southern Californians," the California
Independent System Operator, which runs the state's power grid, said
in a statement.
There
was no immediate call for an extension of the alert, but it wasn't
clear whether more could be coming.
Stephanie
McCorkle, a spokeswoman for the grid operator, said Southern
California has become increasingly dependent on natural gas-fired
plants since the decision last year to shutter the troubled San
Onofre nuclear power plant, which is located between Los Angeles and
San Diego.
When
it was operating, the twin-reactor San Onofre plant produced enough
power for 1.4 million homes.
According
to 2010 California Energy Commission research, 53 percent of the
power generated in the state comes from natural gas.
Record
amounts of natural gas are being burned for heat and electricity
across North America.
Research
firm Bentek Energy said in a statement that domestic natural gas
production dropped about 1 percent in January from the previous
month. That doesn't include Alaska or Hawaii.
"The
recent and persistent cold in the U.S. Northeast and Midwest regions
affected overall production this month, given that wells can freeze
during very cold weather," Jack Weixel, Bentek's director of
energy analysis, said in a statement.
Bentek
analyst Luke Jackson said gas supplies entering Southern California
pipelines have been considerably lower the past two days because of
high gas prices and strong demand in Texas, the Pacific Northwest and
the Rocky Mountain states, which has crimped gas supplies for
Southern California.
The
Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which operates most of that
state's electric grid, asked people to reduce electric use until noon
Friday. Peak demand Thursday morning exceeded 57,000 megawatts and
could break the record of 57,277 megawatts before Texas' cold
temperatures subside, the council said in a statement.
"We
are expecting cold weather to continue through tomorrow morning's
high demand period, and some generation capacity has become
unavailable due to limitations to natural gas supplies," said
Dan Woodfin, the council's director of system operations.
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