By Laila Kearney
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Power grid use in the far northeast United States registered an all-time low over the weekend as mild weather and rooftop solar panels slashed demand on the regional electrical system, grid operator ISO New England said on Tuesday.
WHY IT MATTERS
The U.S. power grid is shifting as climate change, the rise of renewable electricity generation and the electrification of buildings and industries like transportation upend long-held supply and demand trends.
On April 20, power demand on the New England power grid dropped to 5,318 megawatts after three consecutive years of registering record lows, ISO New England, the grid operator, said in a statement. This record was more than 1,200 megawatts, or about 20%, lower than last year’s.
After reaching a trough in the afternoon, power demand more than doubled on the grid throughout the day as the sun set, rooftop solar energy diminished, and homes and business drew more power from the grid. At its peak on the day, so-called behind-the-meter solar peaked at about 6,600 megawatts.
KEY QUOTE
“The trend toward more ‘duck curve’ days, when demand is lowest in the afternoon instead of overnight, illustrates the region’s changing resource mix, and the role different types of resources play over the course of a day,” ISO New England said.
New England is in the midst of a broader shift in consumption, with a longer-term move away from the traditional peaking demand in the summer towards winter peaks as more buildings incorporate electric heat pumps.
(Reporting by Laila Kearney, Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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