101 comments on In a shortage, businesses lose gas before homes
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101 comments on In a shortage, businesses lose gas before homes
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GAIA Host Collective
So what's the cut-off order?
Business off first, then schools, then electric power plants, then homes?
Why do I feel like Cassandra?
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/long_range/lead03/off03_temp.gif
It does look warmer than typical in the central part of the US with normal temps in the Northeast.
But then, she's working on a military project with a bunch of guys who think global warming is a scam.
Obviously, you rate things in terms of criticality. Some businesses are more important than others, some goverenment organizations are more important than others, people should be induced to conserve.
Obviously, the power plants should be the last thing to be shut off.
But really, it's not going to get that bad.
Now we know that the easy gas is gone. Tight sands, arctic, off shore, tight shale, coal bed methane, etc, are pretty much what's left.
It seems like the more I think about this, the more I start tilting in the nuclear option. There's obviously a lot that needs to be done in terms of re-ordering of our way of life to make it less energy intensive, but the nice thing about Nuclear is that it does appear to be a stable source of energy if you start using breeder reactors and recycle your waste until the point of close to net energy extraction.
But I'm hardly an expert.
However, at the time I was adamant that the rush to natural gas was going to quickly soak up new extraction margins.
"Quickly" in the energy business is a decade.
Too bad Calpine didn't take my advice.
The other problem is the big 800 MW natural gas electric day peakers that purchase directly from the interstate lines. They are not regulated by states but by FERC, and it would take a declared federal state of emergency to throttle them back.