Flex Alert Extends to Thursday

Update by the edhat staff
September 8, 2022

California ISO extended the flex alert through Wednesday, September 7 and Thursday, September 8.


Update by the California ISO
September 6, 2022

With high temperatures in the forecast and record-high demand for electricity predicted, the California Independent System Operator (ISO) issued a statewide Flex Alert, a call for voluntary electricity conservation, today, Tuesday Sept 6th to help stabilize the state’s electric grid and deal with uncertainty created by the extraordinary conditions.

During a Flex Alert, Californians are strongly urged to lower electricity use by setting thermostats to 78 or higher, health permitting, avoid using major appliances, and turning off all unnecessary lights. Energy reduction during a Flex Alert can prevent further emergency measures, including rotating power outages.

To minimize discomfort and help with grid stability, consumers are also encouraged to pre-cool their homes and use major appliances before 4 p.m., when solar energy is typically abundant. The Flex Alert is scheduled between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m., when the grid is most stressed from high demand and less solar energy on the system.

Goleta City remind the public that the Goleta Valley Library (500 N. Fairview Ave) is available as a Cooling Center during their regular operating hours. Hours of operation are:

  • Tuesday-Thursday 10am-7pm
  • Friday & Saturday 10am-5:30pm
  • Sunday 1pm-5pm

For information on Flex Alerts, and to find more electricity conservation tips, visit FlexAlert.org.


Update by the California ISO
September 3, 2022

The California Independent System Operator (ISO) has issued another statewide Flex Alert, calling for voluntary electricity conservation for today, Saturday, Sept. 3 from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m., due to increasing high heat, tightening energy supplies and more potential strain on the grid.


Update by the California ISO
September 2, 2022

For the third straight day, high heat and heightened demand for electricity has resulted in the California Independent System Operator (ISO) issuing a statewide call for voluntary electricity conservation. The most recent Flex Alert has been issued for today, Friday, Sept. 2., from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.

With triple-digit temperatures in much of California and the West, the power grid operator is again expecting high electricity demand, primarily from air conditioning use, and needs voluntary conservation steps to help balance supply and demand.

Flex Alerts have been resulting in some helpful conservation and grid operators and an emergency proclamation from Gov. Gavin Newsom, requested by the ISO, has also freed up some additional resources.

A Restricted Maintenance Operations (RMO) remains in place through Tuesday, Sept. 6, each day from noon to 10 p.m. The declaration orders market participants to avoid any scheduled routine maintenance during those times to ensure all available resources are in service. View the Emergency Notifications fact sheet for more information.

The Flex Alert covers that time of day when the grid is most stressed from higher demand and less solar energy. During that time, consumers are urged to conserve power by setting thermostats to 78 degrees or higher, if health permits, avoiding use of major appliances and turning off unnecessary lights.

To minimize discomfort and help with grid stability, consumers are also encouraged to pre-cool their homes and use major appliances and charge electric vehicles and electronic devices before 4 p.m., when conservation begins to become most critical.

Reducing energy use during a Flex Alert can help stabilize the power grid during tight supply conditions and prevent further emergency measures, including rotating power outages.

For information on Flex Alerts, and to find more electricity conservation tips, visit FlexAlert.org.


Update by the California ISO
September 1, 2022

The California Independent System Operator (ISO) has extended its statewide Flex Alert, calling for a second consecutive day of voluntary electricity conservation tomorrow, Thursday, Sept. 1, from 4 to 9 p.m., due to continuing extreme temperatures pushing up energy demand and tightening available power supplies. 


By California ISO
August 31, 2022

The California Independent System Operator (ISO) has issued a statewide Flex Alert, a call for voluntary electricity conservation, for today, Aug. 31 from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m., due to high temperatures pushing up energy demand and tightening available power supplies.

With excessive heat in the forecast across much of the state and Western U.S., the grid operator is expecting high electricity demand, primarily from air conditioning use, and is calling for voluntary conservation steps to help balance supply and demand.

Additional Flex Alerts are also possible through the Labor Day weekend as recordsetting temperatures are forecast across much of the West. In what’s likely to be the most extensive heat wave so far in the West this year, temperatures in Northern California are expected to be 10-20 degrees warmer than normal through Tuesday, Sept. 6.

In Southern California, temperatures are expected to be 10-18 degrees warmer than normal. Death Valley is currently forecast to peak at 126 degrees on Saturday, which would tie the highest temperature ever recorded on Earth in the month of September.

Today’s Flex Alert is scheduled between 4 p.m. and 9 p.m., when the grid is most stressed from higher demand and less solar energy. During that time, consumers are urged to conserve power by setting thermostats to 78 degrees or higher, if health permits, avoiding use of major applicances and turning off unnecessary lights. They should also avoid charging electric vehicles while the Flex Alert is in effect.

To minimize discomfort and help with grid stability, consumers are also encouraged to pre-cool their homes and use major appliances and charge electric vehicles and electronic devices before 4 p.m., when conservation begins to become most critical.

Reducing energy use during a Flex Alert can help stabilize the power grid during tight supply conditions and prevent further emergency measures, including rotating power outages.

For information on Flex Alerts, and to find more electricity conservation tips, visit FlexAlert.org.

Flex Alert Conservation Actions

Before 4 p.m.:

  • Pre-cool home by setting the thermostat to as low as 72 degrees
  • Use major appliances, including:
    • Washer and dryer
    • Dishwasher
    • Oven and stove for pre-cooking and preparing meals
  • Charge electric vehicles
  • Adjust blinds and drapes to cover windows

From 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.:

  • Set thermostat to 78 degrees or higher, if health permits
  • Avoid using major appliances and charging electric vehicles
  • Turn off all unnecessary lights

About Flex Alerts

A Flex Alert is issued by the ISO when the electricity grid is under stress because of generation or transmission outages, or from persistent hot temperatures. View the fact sheet on Emergency Notifications on our News webpage. Follow grid conditions in real time at ISO’s Today’s Outlook, download the free ISO Today mobile app, and follow us on Twitter at @California_ISO.

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116 Comments

  1. We are asked to not use major appliances, charge electric vehicles and keep unnecessary lights off from 4-9pm. Keep in mind this is the time period when many are arriving home from work, cooking dinner, doing homework, laundry and plugging in EVs for the following day. It is unrealistic that this state believes we should live in all electric houses and only drive EVs, when the grid cannot handle the current situation.

  2. If you’re going to get an EV, then you better look at getting a generator! I understand california is trying to outlaw those too, but they’re still pretty easy to get. The new EV pickups would make an excellent choice because they have the capacity to carry a generator, making longer trips and driving during increasingly frequent power outages more feasible. Not sure what the situation is regarding a tow package and trailer for a tesla to haul a generator. In any case, I’ll stick to my traditional combustion engine vehicles. Nothing beats being able to fill the tank in minutes, drive hundreds of miles in a single day, and being able to keep a couple cans of spare fuel on hand in case of emergencies.

  3. Shutdown nuclear and fossil fuel power generation plants. Vigorously eliminate ICE engines for vehicles, lawn mowers and everything else. Forbid natural gas for home heat and cooking. Provide vigorous subsidies for EVs. Don’t promote national sources for rare earth materials or solar panel manufacture. And don’t invest in a more robust electrical infrastructure. Yeah, no one could have possibly predicted this scenario and to suggest otherwise is to believe conspiracy theories.

  4. We have running water at least – unlike Mississippi with failed Jim Crow era infrastructure. We have electricity in the winter – unlike Texas who is working off an antiquated grid with multiple single points of failure. But yes – repuglicans insert your complaints now about how horrible California is even though you continue to live here.

    • “We have running water at least…” Now THAT is a 3rd world perspective! There does not seem to be much hope for US infrastructure or, from energy/food perspectives, that of most of the World. Trickle up economics are almost complete while the people fight Left vs Right vs everyone else amongst themselves. Few countries seem to have this together, Uruguay being one (98% renewable electric w/ no shortages). We actually use electric heat/cool, electric hot water, pump our own water and our total power bill still averages only $200/month) Our SB City water bill was often over $200/mo! While not easy to implement, there are quality alternatives in life.

  5. How are all the electric cars going to charge up…. What about after 2035…? How will our modern society cope without have A/C…? Dependency on Chinese sourced lithium batteries, Solar Panels , Wind turbine components will raise our standard of living…? For the rich? Who exactly can afford this RUSH into “Green Sustainability” without fossil fuel / petroleum usage…? The Chinese are continuing to build COAL plants, mine lithium and all the components needed to supply these “Green mandates” in the West. Germany and Western Europe are already feeling the pain of limited Natural Gas…. WHY are we as a society, taking 10 steps backwards? Bring back Nuclear Power Plants . Petroleum manufacturing AND incorporate “Sustainable Energy” WE are not at the point where Wind Machines and solar can generate enough power to keep people warm in the winter, cool in the summer and Charge electric vehicles….

  6. Innovation:
    https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2022/08/chinas-2-megawatt-molten-salt-thorium-nuclear-reactor-has-start-up-approval.html
    https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2022/08/texas-applies-to-build-molten-salt-nuclear-by-2025.html
    If Newsom would have had his way two years ago, he would have shut down Diablo Cyn and almost all of the Natural Gas power plants. Addition and subtraction are hard but he did good. Inadvertantly.
    When it comes to power, you build to 10-15% beyond demand to allow for replacement, breakdowns etc and then subtract 10% (Diablo 24/7/365) AFTER you add 10% of a similar 24/7/365 source not before.

    • Its a permit for an engineering department to try it out. I highly doubt they are going to do it in a way that would destroy their entire campus.
      Besides:
      #1 Low concentrations of fissible materials… a stark contrast to LWR and HWR designs where the all the fissile material is present in the core and reactor safety is maintained with control rods.
      #2 The second safety feature comes from physical properties of the fuel-salt. The fuel-salts are known to physically expand on heating to such an extent that temperature increases in the core will push fuel-salt out of the core and decrease the amount of fissile material in the core. [6] The fuel salts are also known to decrease neutron production on heating which further decreases the amount of fission events taking place in the core in the event of a temperature rise. [6] The combination of these two features lends a unique safety advantage to MSRs compared to LWR and HWR designs and essentially precludes the possibility of a fission run-away event
      #3 Mitigation of major concern. Corrosives
      Current research in containing MSR waste is focused on sequestering the MSR waste in glasses, taking inspiration from the way high level waste in current spent fuel reprocessing is stored diluted in chemically inert glasses.
      From Stanford in 2021, an even handed assessment
      Safety Features of MSRs
      Safety features are built into the reactor and materials design of MSRs. The first, and potentially most crucial safety feature, comes from the formulation of the fuel salt itself. The fuel-salt is designed with a low enough concentration of fissile material that the only time a fission reaction can be sustained in the fuel-salt is when the fuel-salt nears a moderator (graphite in MSRs). [7] This only occurs in the reactor core and means only a fraction of the total nuclear fuel is undergoing a sustained fission reaction at any given time, a stark contrast to LWR and HWR designs where the all the fissile material is present in the core and reactor safety is maintained with control rods. [3] The second safety feature comes from physical properties of the fuel-salt. The fuel-salts are known to physically expand on heating to such an extent that temperature increases in the core will push fuel-salt out of the core and decrease the amount of fissile material in the core. [6] The fuel salts are also known to decrease neutron production on heating which further decreases the amount of fission events taking place in the core in the event of a temperature rise. [6] The combination of these two features lends a unique safety advantage to MSRs compared to LWR and HWR designs and essentially precludes the possibility of a fission run-away event – what researchers at Oak Ridge National Lab termed a “major accident”. [5] A core temperature rise due to increased fission activity (which can only occur in a small amount of fuel) would self-correct and decrease the neutron population of the core. The design and material properties of MSRs provides impressive safety features, but also presents other safety concerns.
      Safety Concerns
      An important concern comes from the method of removing contaminants and fission by-products from the fuel-salt. Fission reactions generate products that are strong neutron absorbers (neutron poisons) that can destroy the neutron population in a reactor. A well-studied example of this is the generation of the strong neutron absorber, Xe-135, as a decay daughter of various species. Xe-135 can be removed by operating the reactor carefully such that the buildup of Xe-135 is balanced by its removal so-called burning of the Xe-135. However, other neutron poisons can not be removed in a reasonable time scale during the reaction and are only eliminated by physically removing fuel rods that contain these poisons. [8] This presents an interesting design challenge for MSRs that do not have individual fuel rods, but instead contain a continuously circulating fluid. This was a recognized problem as early as the first MSR experiments performed at ORNL, and the proposed solution involves an onsite processing facility (chemical processing plant in Fig. 1) for cleaning the fuel-salt after it has spent time in the reactor and generated neutron poisons. [5] However, this solution leads to a general design challenge of moving radioactive waste safely from the reactor core to the processing facility and handling radioactive contamination in the structural components of the processing facility (e.g. pumps, pipes, etc.). The structural components are primarily nickel-based alloys that withstand corrosive attack from the fuel-salt, and radioactive isotopes of nickel, such as Ni-59 and Ni-63, are long-term storage issues that present radiation hazards for greater than 1000 years. [9,10] Handling contaminated structural components does not necessarily present an impossible challenge: reprocessing of spent fuel and structures around the spent fuel already does occur on the order of ~4000 metric tons of material per year, and structural components of MSRs would in principle be designed for durability. [5,11,12]
      A more difficult challenge arises for handling the fuel-salt waste from the reactor. Extensive work was performed in the 1970s at ORNL to identify fission by-products in the MSR waste and to develop processes for “cleaning” the fuel-salt of certain neutron poisons and contaminants. [13,14] However, cleaning the fuel-salts still generates hazardous waste that must be dealt with. The ORNL scheme for cleaning the fuel-salts of a MSR highlights the kind of waste products that exist. For the 2250 MWth MSR developed at ORNL, the fuel-salt cleaning process was estimated to generate 2 m3 of waste every 220 days. [15] This particular process was designed to recover U-233 present in the waste stream. The final waste composition was 76.3-12.3-9.8-0.64 mole % LiF-ThF4-BeF2-Zr4 and 0.96 mole % rare earths (including Sr-90 and Zr-95). [15] Though modern MSR designs will have varied waste streams from the ORNL experiments, common waste elements remain, including lithiated fluoride or chloride salts, left-over fuel (e.g. U or Th isotopes), and a host of fission by-products. [16,17] This is high level radioactive waste that must be managed carefully. Though management of high level waste already exists, MSR waste presents a challenge in that some form of containing the salt waste must be developed, since the MSR waste is corrosive (even in the solid state highly corrosive gases are produced) and is not the conventional fuel rods from LWRs or HWRs. [12,16] Current research in containing MSR waste is focused on sequestering the MSR waste in glasses, taking inspiration from the way high level waste in current spent fuel reprocessing is stored diluted in chemically inert glasses. [16] There is a lack of experimental studies on the long-term (>1 year) durability of chloride or fluoride containing glasses though, so developing strategies for containing MSR waste is still an active area of research. [16]
      All nuclear reactors generate gaseous waste (mostly Xe-135 and tritium). [8] MSRs generate relatively large quantities of tritium, and this presents an important safety challenge. [16] Tritium readily exchanges hydrogen in with water vapor to form tritiated water vapor that condenses to become tritiated water, which is difficult and costly to separate from ordinary water. [18] This tritiated water is a potential environmental health risk that must be managed carefully. Tritium is a low energy beta emitter that has a relatively short half-life of ~14 days. [19] The potential for uptake in the human body though is worrying nonetheless, as tritiated water absorbs readily through skin. [18] Tritium is formed in MSR reactors primarily from the decay of Li-7. Though Li-6 is the dominant isotope of Li used in the MSR salt-fuel solutions, Li-6 has a large neutron absorption cross section (940 barns) and converts to Li-7 readily. [5,20] Concerningly, tritium was observed to diffuse through the nickel-based alloys that make up the majority of MSR components. [5,13] While estimates from ORNL in the 1970s place MSR tritium production less than HWRs of the time, more modern estimates MSR tritium production significantly higher than HWRs. [5,16]The second safety feature comes from physical properties of the fuel-salt. The fuel-salts are known to physically expand on heating to such an extent that temperature increases in the core will push fuel-salt out of the core and decrease the amount of fissile material in the core. [6] The fuel salts are also known to decrease neutron production on heating which further decreases the amount of fission events taking place in the core in the event of a temperature rise. [6] The combination of these two features lends a unique safety advantage to MSRs compared to LWR and HWR designs and essentially precludes the possibility of a fission run-away event . [18,21]
      Outlook
      Research and interest in MSRs has persisted for more than 6 decades, but commercialization and practical use remains to be seen. While there are design and material features of MSRs that do provide safety benefits, such as the elimination of possible fission run-away events, there are still safety issues involving material handling that must be mitigated before commercialization of these reactors begins. Nonetheless, there is considerable interest in MSRs as an important reactor design for the future. [1]

  7. California has been free to build out the electrical grid since over a couple decades ago regardless of Federal edicts. Even with the worlds 6th largest economy, a Democrat super majority the State Government still did nothing substantial enough to rise to this moment. The CA Emperors haven’t had to wear clothes since the Gray Davis years
    Water is the next big issue and it will take a lot of power to run desal plants and pump water uphill away from the ocean and into treatment and storage. It will also take a battle with the Coastal Commission which blocked Huntinton Beach’s desal plant

  8. so these fools, knowing this heat wave is coming, launch a request to us the day of the beginning of a nasty heat wave and tell us not to use much electricity from 4-9. Majority of us get off work around 4-5, get home, have to cool off the hot house or apartment, make dinner for the kids, kids and myself use electricity to power things for their homework, and entertainment. But they expect us to just go home and sit down in a hot room and just wait until 9? LOL ok….

  9. According to UCSB, they generate 15% of their annual use from on campus Solar production.
    I expect that % number to drop under 10% as they move to 100% electric vehicles and all the charging stations increases their use exponentially
    https://www.energy.ucsb.edu/program-information/campus-energy-generation#:~:text=Together%2C%20these%20solar%20installations%20generate,%2C%20on%2Dcampus%20power%20production.

  10. This is cool, no pun intended…
    A new way to turn heat into energy
    https://news.osu.edu/a-new-way-to-turn-heat-into-energy/
    The discovery is based on tiny particles called paramagnons—bits that are not quite magnets, but that carry some magnetic flux. This is important, because magnets, when heated, lose their magnetic force and become what is called paramagnetic. A flux of magnetism—what scientists call “spins”—creates a type of energy called magnon-drag thermoelectricity, something that, until this discovery, could not be used to collect energy at room temperature.
    Magnets are a crucial part of collecting energy from heat: When one side of a magnet is heated, the other side—the cold side—gets more magnetic, producing spin, which pushes the electrons in the magnet and creates electricity.
    The paradox, though, is that when magnets get heated up, they lose most of their magnetic properties, turning them into paramagnets—“almost-but-not-quite magnets,” Heremans calls them. That means that, until this discovery, nobody thought of using paramagnets to harvest heat because scientists thought paramagnets weren’t capable of collecting energy.
    What they found, Heremans said, is that paramagnons do, in fact, produce the kind of spin that pushes electrons

  11. I’m pleased several people are humorously advocating getting a MULE as a transportation alternative if/when the grid collapses. They run on weeds! Mules built America and fed the nation until mechanical farm equipment led small farm owners into leveraged debt and the banks took their land which is now consolidated into Agribusiness. What isn’t being snapped up by the CCP or let go fallow by Bill Gates, that is.

  12. Dumber and Dumbest! Yes, that is what our state energy policy is, headed by a child…Gavin Newsom. Right? Mandate we all go to EV’s and then put restrictions on recharging. I heard a report that the next thing to come is the ability to monitor and control your home thermostat! The Democrats are trying to bankrupt us and it’s time for them to go! Seriously, WTF! Dismantle our ability as a net energy exporter, dismantle our nuclear energy providing ENDLESS energy, mandate EV’s, make us depend on the ChiCom’s for renewables and bankrupt our economy in the process!
    Take ANY metric; education, crime, economy or energy, it’s ALL a cluster, but they keep whining about Orange Dude! Just a testimony to their never ending psychosis and narcissism!
    No worries, November is just around the corner and hopefully these losers will be shown the door.
    As for Joe, what a disgrace! Hate filled, beldge of nonsense, he mumbled through his feeble attempt to address the nation last night. Has no idea where he even is, much less articulate national policy. Truly the poster child for the failed, incompetent and STUPID liberal agenda!
    When is enough, enough?

  13. From a purely financial standpoint, one might consider buying an older gas-burning vehicle. We were tired of getting door dings, which seem to appear after trips to Trader Joes for some reason. Yes, door dings are just a part of owning a vehicle, but we simply decided to get a great running “beater” that we could take to the grocery store, Home Depot, Costco, etc, Anyway, we picked up a 1985 Chevy Malibu with a small V-8 (305/5.0 liter….not the 350). It has only 115K miles on it, and gets about 17 or so in the city and up to 23 while on cruise control on the freeway. The cost was $1400 The way we figure it, we have about $25,000 that we can spend on gas to equal the initial cost of a new or even a used hybrid. My math says that at $6 gallon we can drive our “beast” over 70,000 miles without exceeding the cost of a hybrid. Won’t get into the safety aspect, but I’d rather be in my Malibu that a tin-can. As far as polution goes, well….I’ll let the State of California decide when to confiscate my “Boo.” If you see an older dark blue Malibu at TJ’s, feel free to continue to bang your car door against mine….LOL!!!

  14. I’ve been reviewing what supplies the electricity from California’s CAISO website during these flex alerts. Were it not for natural gas likely from fracking, wide spread blackouts across the state would have happened.
    The vast majority of the imported electricity also came from natural gas per the caiso website. Solar was great only while the sun shines. The contribution of wind was minuscule compared to the power needed by the whole state. Even then, wind performance was far below the installed capacity most of the time when energy was needed most.
    Get the politicians with their radical green agendas out of energy planning because they are going to create severe economic loss, cause people to suffer when it’s hot or cold, and vulnerable people may die.

  15. I think that some kind of program should be created to target power outages to the people who supported the energy policies that caused this crisis. I surely didn’t vote for this, and I have no intention of cutting my electrical usage or “flexing” my power. If California’s energy policy had been managed the way I wanted it to be, there would be plentiful energy available and electric bills would be about 1/3 of what they cost today. This is not my fault, and I will not sacrifice to help mitigate the damage caused by other people’s poor decisions.

    • @4:30 smart people or people who can afford it? If you don’t have it are you not smart or can you just not afford it? What you and others here completely miss, is people want to be green, they want to have solar panels, they want to drive electric cars, and those that can, will. The will is there for everyone just not the ability. By forcing the issue like CA does, it drastically increases the energy costs for those that can’t afford to do those things, the very people we should be supporting we’re hurting with these policies. A consequence of putting the cart before the horse. Meanwhile the liberal elites can feel virtuous driving around in their Teslas or, like Alexblue, sitting in his solar power SB home with the AC blasting during a Flex Alert, ignorant to the negative impact the policies they support have on many Californians.

  16. It looks like The CAISO website has already called for an insufficient green energy alert for tomorrow.
    Some place up up north got a designated “demand response event” which is probably newspeak for a power shutdown. There ‘s a downward kink in the power supply for the state, and the line went from blue to red. The “Palermo” area. I hope the senior citizens are safe in that area.

  17. John Fetterman for US Senate! Yep, the poster child for liberal, democratic ideology. Let’s see,
    bankrupt Pennsylvania energy sectors, free murderers and legalize heroin? What could go wrong?
    Shouldn’t the question be; “What’s wrong with the DNC?” Here in Cali, out of control crime, taxes, spending, cost of living. Having to turn off major appliances during peak hours. A Governor who yesterday, wearing a fleece jacket, in 100 degree heat, telling us “we need to conserve.” Folks, these liars and grifters need to be thrown out of office before we reach the point of no return. Business and individuals leaving Cali in droves, shouldn’t a lightbulb go off?
    I know, I know, what happens outside our little SB fart bubble is really not important in the grand scheme of things and if Pennsylvania voters want to elect a tattooed, hoodie wearing moron, that’s their problem!

    • VOR, I worked hard for what I have and I INVESTED in the infrastructure of my home to make it more secure and more livable.
      I’m speaking of clean energy and infrastructure initiatives offered at the Federal level, which have been rejected by your ilk for decades.
      Too bad you victim claiming Right Wingers have lost sight of what this country used to value, i.e., planning, investing, and building for the future.
      Cry more.

    • The liberal elite has spoken. Alex has worked hard to own his home in SB and outfit it with enough solar and batteries to power his air conditioning even while others are told to cut back or forced to endure brownouts – so those not as fortunate and who are significantly burdened by the high cost / consequences of these liberal policies can, in Alex’s own words, “cry [him]a F’king river”. Then this liberal elitist has the gal to blame “Right Wingers” lack of planning and investing, for CA’s energy woes yet is unable to articulate how in a supermajority Dem controlled state that is even possible, and fails to grasp that we’re currently purchasing/importing 27% of our electricity from “Right Winger” states.

    • To answer your question absolutely nothing. I have something against elitist like your self who feel those less fortunate and hurting under the very policies you support should “cry you a F’ing river”. And you double down with telling that single mom trying to raise her kid solo, the young adult working two jobs to support his parent, the person who dropped out of high school to get a fast food job because his parents were useless alcoholics, to the person just trying to get by, to “work smarter, not harder” so they can provide a better standard of living. You represent everything I hate about the liberal elitist mentality.

    • “You represent everything I hate about the liberal elitist mentality.”
      Same guy:
      “In reading comments on EdHat I only see hate coming from one side.”
      “These days the hate it only coming from one side, the other half learned how to live and let live.”
      “While the extremes on the right certainly have their hate, hate and intolerance has taken over the left.it’s even evident on EdHat, the lefty commentators who constantly spew hate, condescension and insults here but it’s never reciprocated but the more conservative posters.”

    • Cry Me a River, you have no idea what policies I support.
      Because you live in a world defined by extremist thinking. Funny enough, I have been providing financial support and housing to a wonderful individual whose horrible background is very close to that kid with the alcoholic parents whom you cite, you talk about it, people like me do it.
      But all that matters to you is “red team v. blue team”.
      Dude I’m not even a Democrat. But I do very much enjoy triggering you, you make it so easy.

    • Ha, yep, as soon as I saw “Cali” I was like WTF is this person from?
      Beyond that, do we have problems, yeah. Has the right wing been fighting every single infrastructure repair measure offered by the Democrats, yes.
      Have they fought investment in renewable energy to keep the money tap on for their petro-lords, yes.
      And now these fools are unhappy about a deteriorating grid and insufficient energy needs. Well cry me a F’ing river. I’m off the electric grid and will continue to enjoy my nice cool house because I INVESTED IN MY INFRASTRUCTURE.

    • Alex, great form sharing how privileged you are to not only afford to own a home in SB but also a solar and battery system large enough to power that home WITH AC, while telling the people who can’t afford it, the “fools [who] are unhappy about a deteriorating grid and insufficient energy need” to “cry [you] a F’ing river”. How liberal elite of you. But please do tell us how the “right wing” has any power to fight anything here in CA where the Democrats have full control over everything and a supermajority in the legislature to pass whatever laws they want.

  18. Today’s flex alert is extended to 10pm per CAISO. At the present moment:
    Natural gas is supplying ~53% of our electricity
    Imported electricity is at ~27%
    Renewables is a mere ~9%
    Natural gas and other reliable energy sources are saving the state. I have no connections to the hydrocarbon industry, and I only want to see reliable sufficient energy for the state.

  19. Per the CAISO website, we get 2 bonus hours of flex alert time today: 3:00-10:00 instead of 4:00-9:00. Again, flex alert is a newspeak term for inadequate green energy production. I am guilty of wrongthink for pointing that out. It’s only going to get worse unless we get new political leadership in the state.

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