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kevinburke | 1 year ago
It's perverse that people who live in safe, urban areas are subsidizing people who live in wildfire zones. The savings come largely from not doing that anymore.
kevinburke | 1 year ago
It's perverse that people who live in safe, urban areas are subsidizing people who live in wildfire zones. The savings come largely from not doing that anymore.
amluto|1 year ago
- Urban customers should have an incentive to use electricity over gas, which they would if rates were reasonable.
- Urban customers should not pay per kWh even if one thinks they should subsidize rural customers. It should be some kind of tax with reasonable allocation.
- Undercharging rural customers for provision of service and overcharging per kWh messes up incentives, too. If suburban or rural communities faced the actual cost of transmission to their area and distribution within it, they could make real decisions, for example:
# Technologies exist to reduce the risk that a power line fault starts a fire. Search for “ground fault neutralizer” or “REFCL.” Similarly common reclosers take a very YOLO approach to deal with a faulted line, and other approaches exist. PG&E, of course, doesn’t want to use these because the ridiculous CPUC rules let them make more profit by spending more money trimming trees.
# Communities could maintain their own lines and have actual locally enforced codes about vegetation.
# Communities could install batteries at their end of transmission lines to help ride through public safety power shutdowns and to level out their own loads. And they could even build small wind turbines optimized for operation in high winds (which are rather strongly correlated with those shutdowns) to generate a few MW and keep those batteries charged. Heck, this could be automated: de-energize the line when the wind is high automatically, and there won’t even be a substantial inrush when re-energizing when the wind stops because the batteries can reduce load to zero.
# A community could decide the cost isn’t worth it and build its own mini grid. This might spur interesting investment into things like small modular reactors :)
- The ownership and regulatory structure right now sucks, amplifying all the problems above and the lack of real solutions.
CobaltFire|1 year ago
If we stop subsidizing the foothills by creating urban utility districts it would solve the PG&E problem.
We would have a new problem of causing a ton of people to be unable to continue living in those areas without some kind of off-grid program.
Long term I think this is the only sane way forward though.
abeppu|1 year ago
But people in those areas are likely to be able to benefit from solar, so maybe being "off the grid" in the sense of not having long runs of power lines surrounded by trees to your house in the country is reasonable, and perhaps also cheaper for those rural residents anyway?
marssaxman|1 year ago
That sounds like more of a solution than a problem: those places are going to burn, so it's better that people stop living there.
thatguy0900|1 year ago
ahmeneeroe-v2|1 year ago
It's not exactly fair to treat those rural residents as burdens to the urban areas when they provide the means for the urban areas to exist.
avidiax|1 year ago
There's a difference between people that are in farming/ranching and industry vs. people that are rural to afford a more lavish home in the woods or on the hills.
Even still, a system that doesn't appropriately price and apportion risk will always be under pressure.
janalsncm|1 year ago
Unless you’re referring to farmers I don’t understand this point. As of right now it is the other way around.
rangestransform|1 year ago
- we get rid of nimby enabling laws
- don’t subsidize rural customers
- automate farming