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Environment

Can Communities Generate Their Own Power?

By Greg Pahl, AlterNet. Posted August 6, 2008.


People embrace the buying of local food; has the time come for local energy co-operatives, too?
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With the price of gasoline well over $4 per gallon in the United States, the cost of energy is finally a topic of everyday conversation. But the energy challenges we face extend well beyond the gas pump. The era of cheap fossil-fueled energy is over, and thanks to decades of inaction we now face a series of critical choices. And one of those choices is not just what kind of energy to use (such as wind vs. solar) but how we receive that energy via the national electrical grid.

Most people simply take the grid for granted -- flip light switch on, light bulb goes on. The average person may not understand the extremely complex system that supports that simple act or why it may be important to change it in order to move to more locally supported energy projects.

While the details of how the grid actually works can get very complicated, in simple terms, here is how the present system works:

Electricity is usually generated at a large, centrally located power plant normally fueled by coal, natural gas, nuclear energy, hydroelectricity or a number of other sources. The voltage of the electricity produced is then increased at a "step up" substation for transmission over long-distance transmission lines to locations where the power is needed. This part of the transmission system is characterized by tall towers and thick wires. Then, the voltage is decreased, or "stepped down," at another substation. A so-called "distribution" power line then caries the electricity to your home, where the voltage is usually stepped down one more time to normal household voltage. This part of the system is characterized by thinner wires on smaller (mostly treated wood) poles that can be seen on virtually every street in communities across the nation. The entire system is often referred to as "the grid."

In its present form, however, the grid is like a dinosaur: big, slow to adapt, and in some ways rather stupid. Much of the switching for the grid, for example, is right out of the 1950s. People in pickup trucks still have to go out and manually turn parts of distribution lines off (or on) with long, insulated poles. In addition, when the deregulation of the electric power market began in the early 1990s, electricity went from being viewed as an essential public service to a commodity. This encouraged the dramatic growth in the long-distance trading (and gaming by some -- think Enron) of electricity, creating stresses on the system that it was not designed to handle. This has led to dramatic price increases in some parts of the nation (the exact opposite of what promoters of this strategy had promised) and a number of dramatic -- and very expensive -- major grid power failures in recent years.

The annualized cost of grid failures (and even momentary interruptions) of the electric grid is estimated to be around $100 million. For the most part, the grid is aging 20th century technology that, in its present form, is simply not up to the challenges of the 21st century. There unquestionably is a need for major changes to the grid. However, just what those changes should entail is the main question.

A Need for Change

Electricity demand is at an all-time high in the United States. In 2007, total U.S. electricity generation was 4,159,514 gigawatt-hours (GWh) -- a 2.3 percent increase over the previous year, according to the Edison Electric Institute. But consumption of electricity is projected to increase a whopping 45 percent by the year 2030, according to the U.S. Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration. Whether this projection will actually be reached or not can be debated, but this probable increase in demand poses a real challenge to a grid that can barely keep up with present demand. To meet this new demand, the utility industry estimates that the cost of improvements to grid infrastructure could be at least $900 billion between now and 2020.

There are two main alternatives to meet this demand. The first is to build new transmission capability (or to increase the capacity of existing transmission) and to build large new central generation facilities. This has been the most common approach for many years and is the strategy generally favored by Wall Street and most major utilities.

The second strategy is to build new distributed generation (DG) where, or near where, it is needed, avoiding the need for new transmission. These DG facilities are normally smaller and scattered throughout a region to meet the needs of local customers. This strategy is supported by a growing number of local community activists and other local business interests who tend to view electricity as a basic public necessity rather than a commodity. Considering the huge cost of the first strategy, much of which would probably be borne by ratepayers, the second approach would seem to make a lot of sense, especially since transmission expansion is already severely limited in most urban areas in the United States.


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See more stories tagged with: energy, renewable energy, clean energy, electric grid, energy cooperatives, community support energy

Greg Pahl is the author of several books including, The Citizen-Powered Energy Handbook: Community Solutions to a Global Crisis.

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View:
Does Involvement Still Exist?
Posted by: edgar1 on Aug 6, 2008 4:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Are most people so into their own lives and islolated from neighbors that the cooperation needed to make this work no longer is possible in a largely urban and suburban America. People come and go; rarely do people remain in communities very long. I love the concept posed here. But the coop idea goes back to the days of farmers helping neighbors. Why there were viable populist movements in the Midwest and even in the South, based on neighbors helping neighbors. Is that simply in the past and we passively take our food and energy from big producers on terms that are dictated to us? I thought after the 60's that community based coops and busineses would flourish, but they haven't. People have focused on individual and family "success". Our kids can't even identify most animals or trees, let alone tell you where there electricity (or food) comes from.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

The author failed to mention cronyism and corporate meddling
Posted by: PaulC on Aug 6, 2008 8:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here in Ohio the Public Utility Commission of Ohio (PUCO) is as corrupt as corrupt can be - the longstanding Chairman might as well be a utility CEO. It was only recently that the state's ombudsman for taxpayers was even remotely pulling for consumers. For as long as I can remember PUCO has been a rubber stamp for the industry.

How do you inject honest change in a system as antiquated and corrupt as this? And I suspect this little drama is repeated in states across the US.

peace,
Paul

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Experimental farm.Congo
Posted by: govindas on Aug 11, 2008 9:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just look at this experimental farm in Congo:

http://workingvvillages.org

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: xperimental farm.Congo Posted by: HelenHighwater
Liberating communities with language (pt 1)
Posted by: davemcarthur on Aug 12, 2008 6:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is an excellent article in many ways. Its focus on the capacity of communities to make intelligent uses of their local electrical potential is very helpful. The nations that will provide the lead in the transition from the Cheap Oil/Gas Age to the Great Electrical/Solar Age are those that embrace their local resources.

Here are a few thoughts that will make subsequent articles even more excellent.

Be clear that distributed generation of electrical resources has existed for over a century. Indeed community generation and reticulation was the dominant model in many regions well into the second half of last century. There is no question about the capacity of communities to develop sophisticated electrical systems.

Powerful merchant bankers are extremely hostile to this activity for a range of reasons:
Many community-owned systems are often freehold i.e. the bankers cannot leverage against them.
The bankers make the largest short-term profits off Bulk-generated electricity systems with their inefficient and destructive uses of minerals.
Their ownership of the intelligence of community grids enables them to dictate how dwellings and transport/communication systems are designed and operated.

Most of the technology enabling communities to make intelligent uses of their community solar, carbon and electrical potential exists. The main obstacle to this use is the sophisticated legislative restrictions on communities. Learn from New Zealand:

Throughout most of last century New Zealand provided the world with a very advanced model of how nations can make optimal use their electrical potential. The nation was structured into 60 communities, each of which owned and developed their local electrical grid and its intelligence. Every adult citizen had full direct voting rights in their local community structure. Some communities elected to invest in sophisticated demand control structures and efficient technologies. Each community had full rights to participate in the national trade of electrical resources. Continued part 11

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Liberating communities with language (pt 2)
Posted by: davemcarthur on Aug 12, 2008 6:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Continued.
One of the prices we New Zealanders had to pay for being permitted to adopt our Nuclear Free policy in the 1980s was to accept the Neocom economic model as propagated by the likes of Arthur Andersen and Co (Enron fame), KPMG, and the Harvard Electricity Policy Group et al. What is euphemistically called the Electricity Industry Reform legislation was foisted on us.

In reality the Reforms instituted a fascist regime. We lost many of our rights as citizens and the new laws designated us “tradeable commodities”. Communities can no longer operated as “service- driven” entities and have to operate as closely defined “profit driven entities”. When communities proved they could outperform the new multinational self-styled “energy companies” extra draconian laws were forced on us in 1998 that forbids New Zealand communities from owning both their local grid and its intelligence. They were forced to divest of either their wiring infrastructure or their intelligence infrastructure (in the new ethos described as their “retail” structure) to the likes of TransAlta.

The new corporate owners have a vested interest in maintaining inefficient uses of our electrical potential and stressing the grid to maximum, as the expose of Enron illustrated. As a result Bulk-gen electricity charges to households have doubled in a decade, carbon emissions have rocketed with increased use of thermal plant, household debt levels have rocked and New Zealand is now a model of a nation that is transitioning us from the Cheap Oil/Gas Age into global warfare.

The most important enabler of this unsustainable model is language. Key symbols have been re-engineered so their use is rendered unsustaining and the fascist nature of NZ legislation is obscured. The most potent re-engineered symbols includes “energy”, “deregulation”, “freedom”, “electricity market”, “investment/subsidy” while the “power” and “electricity” symbols (both much abused since the days of the collusion of J P Morgan and Thomas Edison) have also been refined to act more potently as Neocom Speak.

Our universities, schoolteachers, consumer protection agencies, Environmental Education industry and “energy gurus” have all been co-opted to act as unwitting agents of this fascist regime. Most are oblivious to the new roles they play. They wring their hands in dismay at the lack of Distributed Generation of electrical resources and fail to comprehend they, in their roles as “caring educators” are pivotal in sustaining the current derelict regime.

Below are links to resources I am developing based on the New Zealand experience. I trust they will add to the excellence of your articles. In brief:
We are our symbols.
Conserve the potential of “electricity” symbol and state the type of electrical resource you are talking of. People cannot learn that a resource exists if you never refer to it by a name.
Understand that electrical grids are equally communication systems as they are resources transmitters. (Knowledge is physical.)
Distinguish between “smart” and “intelligent”. “Smart” systems and technology in the hands of the amoral work to destroy us. Intelligence involves wisdom and the capacity to have a democratic conversation. Thus intelligent systems and technology are founded in democracy and participants have equal rights as citizens – including the right to ownership of the information about their personal lives and dwelling uses.

I hope the links below are helpful.
Dave McArthur

http://tinyurl.com/55k2xa
“Our Electrical Beings
(The Compassionate Curriculum -Communicating how to make Wise Uses of our Electrical Potential.)

http://tinyurl.com/ywtxch
Rating your Community's Electrical Grid - a draft guide.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Liberating communities with language (pt 2)
Posted by: davemcarthur on Aug 12, 2008 6:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Continued.
One of the prices we New Zealanders had to pay for being permitted to adopt our Nuclear Free policy in the 1980s was to accept the Neocom economic model as propagated by the likes of Arthur Andersen and Co (Enron fame), KPMG, and the Harvard Electricity Policy Group et al. What is euphemistically called the Electricity Industry Reform legislation was foisted on us.

In reality the Reforms instituted a fascist regime. We lost many of our rights as citizens and the new laws designated us “tradeable commodities”. Communities can no longer operated as “service- driven” entities and have to operate as closely defined “profit driven entities”. When communities proved they could outperform the new multinational self-styled “energy companies” extra draconian laws were forced on us in 1998 that forbids New Zealand communities from owning both their local grid and its intelligence. They were forced to divest of either their wiring infrastructure or their intelligence infrastructure (in the new ethos described as their “retail” structure) to the likes of TransAlta.

The new corporate owners have a vested interest in maintaining inefficient uses of our electrical potential and stressing the grid to maximum, as the expose of Enron illustrated. As a result Bulk-gen electricity charges to households have doubled in a decade, carbon emissions have rocketed with increased use of thermal plant, household debt levels have rocked and New Zealand is now a model of a nation that is transitioning us from the Cheap Oil/Gas Age into global warfare.

The most important enabler of this unsustainable model is language. Key symbols have been re-engineered so their use is rendered unsustaining and the fascist nature of NZ legislation is obscured. The most potent re-engineered symbols includes “energy”, “deregulation”, “freedom”, “electricity market”, “investment/subsidy” while the “power” and “electricity” symbols (both much abused since the days of the collusion of J P Morgan and Thomas Edison) have also been refined to act more potently as Neocom Speak.

Our universities, schoolteachers, consumer protection agencies, Environmental Education industry and “energy gurus” have all been co-opted to act as unwitting agents of this fascist regime. Most are oblivious to the new roles they play. They wring their hands in dismay at the lack of Distributed Generation of electrical resources and fail to comprehend they, in their roles as “caring educators” are pivotal in sustaining the current derelict regime.

Below are links to resources I am developing based on the New Zealand experience. I trust they will add to the excellence of your articles. In brief:
We are our symbols.
Conserve the potential of “electricity” symbol and state the type of electrical resource you are talking of. People cannot learn that a resource exists if you never refer to it by a name.
Understand that electrical grids are equally communication systems as they are resources transmitters. (Knowledge is physical.)
Distinguish between “smart” and “intelligent”. “Smart” systems and technology in the hands of the amoral work to destroy us. Intelligence involves wisdom and the capacity to have a democratic conversation. Thus intelligent systems and technology are founded in democracy and participants have equal rights as citizens – including the right to ownership of the information about their personal lives and dwelling uses.

I hope the links below are helpful.
Dave McArthur

http://tinyurl.com/55k2xa
“Our Electrical Beings
(The Compassionate Curriculum -Communicating how to make Wise Uses of our Electrical Potential.)

http://tinyurl.com/ywtxch
Rating your Community's Electrical Grid - a draft guide.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Citizen activism is not necessarily dead in America...
Posted by: djnoll on Aug 12, 2008 7:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but it is on the critical list. I have just completed a paper for my doctorate on the question of sustainable communities and external organizational ecology that addresses the very need for communities to change locally what is nearly impossible to change federally - control of resources and the meeting of citizen needs. This article talks about how th energy grid at the level we have today is inadequate, and is slowly giving way. This is part of our national infrastructure and it is totally dependent on oil, coal, and other fossil fuels. If communities would establish community cooperatives, using cross-boundary alliances that include local governments, local businesses, and citizen activists, these kinds of energy cooperatives, as well as water cooperatives, could address at the local level what is not being addressed on a national level because of corporate and banking influences.

There are ways to come together to do this, and you start in your own neighborhoods getting to know your neighbors. You create lines of communication that extend outward and form into recognized groups. When these groups pair with others to form alliances their political power base expands, and the community ecology for government changes. You create change, it is not just going to happen. It takes effort and work, but it can be done - something the current administration, Congress, and most state governments do not want you to know.

The answers for many of the crises mentioned that are related to energy, food, water, education, environment, etc., can all be better addressed at the local levels. It is how this country was built, and it is how it will survive. It is time to act and to take back our communities from those interests that are not working in the public good. Government likes the status quo, so it is up to you to create enough pressure to change the status quo into something so uncomfortable that it changes to return to a state of balance. Go for it! You have the ability and the power - USE IT! IT IS WHAT BEING A PATRIOT AND A CITIZEN IS ALL ABOUT!

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