California looks to natural gas to keep lights on this winter
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[November 04, 2021]
By Scott DiSavino and Nichola Groom
(Reuters) - After years of restricting the
growth of fossil fuel infrastructure, California is looking to natural
gas for power generation this coming winter after drought and wildfires
leave the state with few other options to keep the lights on.
California has spent years moving away from fossil fuels to reduce
planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions. But U.S. states like California
and Texas have faced notable challenges to their electrical grid in
recent months, and worldwide power crunches have forced other countries
to ramp up output of coal and other fossil fuels to maintain power.
This year, the state has leaned more on gas fired-power plants as
extreme drought has cut hydropower output by more than half, while
frequent wildfires often shut electricity imports from other states.
This week, California regulators could take another step towards
boosting reliance on gas when utility regulators consider two proposals
to increase the amount of gas stored at Aliso Canyon, its biggest
underground storage field. That site experienced a devastating
months-long leak in 2015, and the state is also considering shuttering
it outright.
The state's Public Utilities Commission (PUC) will vote on Thursday
whether to expand storage at the Los Angeles-area facility, owned by
Southern California Gas Co (SoCalGas). Capacity at the site was capped
at 34 billion cubic feet following the leak, and the proposals would
allow that level to increase by either 21% or 100%.
Natural gas prices have surged worldwide as global demand has rebounded
faster than anticipated following pandemic-induced lockdowns, and as
energy shortages force utilities in Europe and Asia to compete for
liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports. (LINK)
Gas supplies have been tight in Southern California for years due to
pipeline limitations and reduced availability of Aliso Canyon, resulting
in curtailments to power generators and higher prices for consumers.
PUC Commissioner Martha Guzman Aceves said in a statement that a smaller
capacity increase "will allow us to get through this winter while we
continue our progress toward planning how to reduce or eliminate our use
of Aliso Canyon by 2027 or 2035, or any time in between."
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A wind-driven wildfire burns near power line tower in Sylmar,
California, U.S., October 10, 2019. REUTERS/Gene Blevins
Environmental groups want the facility closed
entirely and oppose the proposals.
"Instead of pursuing clean energy solutions that can eliminate the
need for Aliso Canyon entirely, California is proposing to expand
this dangerous facility - putting communities at greater risk of
another catastrophic leak," said Alexandra Nagy, California director
of Food & Water Watch.
Hydropower's contribution to electricity is set to fall to just 5%
in 2021, from a five-year average of 12%, while non-hydro renewables,
mainly wind and solar, are expected to rise to 37%, government data
shows.
Gas-fired power plants, meanwhile, will provide about 45% of the
power generated in the state this year, up from the five-year
(2016-2020) average of 41%, according to the U.S. Energy Information
Administration (EIA).
In California, average gas prices were recently at multiyear highs
near $5 per million British thermal units (mmBtu) in the northern
part of the state and over $6 in the south.
Over the summer, Governor Gavin Newsom said extreme drought and
wildfires put California's power grid in a "state of emergency" and
ordered energy agencies to take action.
State agencies have responded through various steps, including
spending $196 million to install four 30-MW gas turbines at two
sites in Northern California, keeping a Redondo Beach gas-fired
plant open through 2023, and asking the federal government to allow
some gas-fired plants to operate without pollution restrictions for
60 days.
California wants to produce all of its electricity from clean
sources by 2045.
(Reporting by Scott DiSavino and Nichola Groom; editing by Richard
Pullin)
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