Electricity Price Increases

   / Electricity Price Increases #101  
But but the government said electricity will become cheaper....
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   / Electricity Price Increases #102  
I lived in LA in the late 80's and remember the smog, so thick it used to be part of the weather forecast.

But once they got it under control, they kept adding more and more layers of regulations to anything they could. Raising costs and driving business away.

However , I have never seen them do anything about planes and airports and anything the political elite want to use. Houses the size of a city block.
Government will always try to exchange at the expense of the governed.
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #103  
Under normal conditions, NG power generation is Always cheaper than coal.
What’s happened in the last few years is political sanctions on Russian NG , plus the sabotage of the Russian pipeline. Western Europe was of course, talked into not using Russian NG.
The US, of course, said, no problem Europe, we’ll help you, so we massively ramped up compressing our NG, to ship to Europe, which drove up our domestic prices and electric prices. Propaganda blaming it on Russia-Ukraine conflict.
Got to luv it

Kanasta has one of the biggest NG reserve in the world but they want too keep it untap to ''save the world from CO2''
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #105  
Probably saving it for later, when natgas is precious or just higher in price. Might come in handy during our next ice age.
For when the greens want to warm the planet to manage climate change?
 
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   / Electricity Price Increases #106  
The foundry was located in a part of California with major air quality issues, and yes, with decreasing local air quality, they were being asked to reduce their emissions. When the local geography doesn't trap air in a bowl, you get "the solution to pollution is dilution" and the emissions get blown away and diluted. So, yes, different air quality regulations in most of Texas.

The foundry made a lot of things for the local area, and won out lots of bids due to their low freight costs. I think that the fact that most locals didn't know they existed speaks for how great a job they were doing on their emissions. However, low emissions is not zero.

In California, we have lots of the population crammed into a couple of bowls, and the air quality goes down the tubes on a regular basis, and those low air quality days lead to Federal crackdowns on local air emissions boards (e.g. CARB) to further reduce emissions. Hence the drive for electric water heating, heat pumps, and EVs. Higher on the list of pollution sources are older vehicles (sorry, I know you are a fan and a collector), small engines, diesels, especially older diesels, and, wait for it, restaurants. Yes all that flame broiled, charcoal grilled food generates a significant amount of local pollution. Currently, the restaurants get an air quality pass, but that's not likely to last. They are just too big a source. In today's economy for food, especially fast food, there is very little margin left, so those regulations are going to be an issue for the restaurants staying in business, as they will either need more filters, or different grills, neither of which is free, and yet millions have their health affected by the lower air quality. Kids stay out of school, parents don't or can't work, and folks die sooner.

If we all get healthy and quit eating fast food, then yes, the air quality problem, and the restaurants would go away. I'm of the mind that Darwin was probably right and we were evolved to pack on the pounds in case of poor harvests and cold winters, so I don't see most folks easily giving up what their bodies are telling them they "ought" to do.

The number one heavy metal water pollutant in the South Bay Area isn't the locally occurring mercury, it is copper, and not from pipes, but the trace amount of copper in disk brake pads washing into the San Francisco Bay when it rains. Lots of commuters, lots of cars, lots of paved areas into a small drainage system.

All the best,

Peter
Restaurants are emission regulated… at least if they have a fixed location.

Flints BBQ that prepared food for the A’s VIP boxes closed because it could not meet increasing air requirements for the BBQ.

The irony is many street corners in sections of Oakland have pop up mom and pop BBQ that have zero over site.

The gypsy pop up’s get a pass and fixed locations get shut down.

The local wood fired pizza place also had to close and the address is no longer occupied.

Part of the issue is to follow the regs is costly, time consuming and constantly evolving… yet street vendors for food to curb stoning car sales go largely unchecked.

My antique cars have not been on the road since 2019 yet all remain fully insured and many currently registered… with the balance registered non-op with the state.

The foundry, paint manufactures, steel mill, fab shops shutter as doing business here is constantly challenged…

Mentioned before family auto business that was zoned out of business this year as my city continues to ban anything auto related from repair, parts and sales…

With all the commercial users closing and the public venues such as Coliseum closed electricity production should have excess capacity.
 
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   / Electricity Price Increases #107  
I mine Bitcoin in my spare time. /s

View attachment 3999224
There are many stories of electricity bills going up once data centers go in.

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Amid rising electric bills, states are under pressure to insulate regular household and business ratepayers from the costs of feeding Big Tech’s energy-hungry data centers.

It’s not clear that any state has a solution and the actual effect of data centers on electricity bills is difficult to pin down. Some critics question whether states have the spine to take a hard line against tech behemoths like Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Meta.

As electric bills rise, evidence mounts that data centers share blame. States feel pressure to act

"The explosive growth of data centers around the country — driven in large part by the burgeoning use of artificial intelligence — could come at a “staggering” cost for average residents with skyrocketing electricity bills."

Power for data centers could come at ‘staggering’ cost to consumers
 
   / Electricity Price Increases #110  
There are many stories of electricity bills going up once data centers go in.
Yep. 30 minutes up the road...another county.. tagged as "data center capital of the world".

Major battles going on in neighborhoods over build outs.

Our electric provider already approved for transmission.. sub station upgrades...and passing the cost to the entire state.
 

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