Thursday, November 12, 2009

Transmission: "Superconductors to Wire a Smarter Grid" (AMSC; PNM)

American Superconductor is trading down $1.06 (3.3%) at $31.16.
From MIT's Technology Review:

A superstation for connecting three independent grids could help solar and wind power.
A proposed hub for connecting the three independent electricity grids that span the continental United States could make it easier to ramp up production of renewable electricity.

Cool power: These superconducting wires form the basis of power cables that carry far more power than conventional copper cables.
Credit: American Superconductor

The project, called the Tres Amigas Superstation, would use superconducting "pipelines" and converter stations to connect three grids: the Western, Eastern, and Texas Interconnections. Connections between the grids have been limited because the grids aren't synchronized--the AC power is out of phase. Special stations that convert AC power into DC power and then back into AC power in the correct phase are needed to move power from one grid to another.

Only a fraction of 1 percent of the electricity generated in the United States can currently be transferred between the grids, and there is no direct connection between Texas and the Western grid. The Tres Amigas station, which will connect all three grids together in one place for the first time, will initially more than double the ability to transfer power between them, providing five gigawatts of capacity. Eventually, the station is expected to transfer as much as 30 gigawatts of power.

The station will "solve a host of problems" related to renewable energy, says Phil Harris, CEO of the Tres Amigas company, based in Santa Fe, NM. Primarily, it will help address a key problem with renewable sources of energy--their intermittency. Because wind comes and goes and clouds block the sun from time to time, wind and solar power can destabilize the electric grid.

One way to compensate is to make sure that no renewable source accounts for too much of the total power mix--so that other sources can easily fill in when there's a drop in power. In Texas, however, this strategy would quickly limit the size of wind farms, since the grid there is relatively small. By connecting to the rest of the country, Tres Amigas removes the limit on the size of these farms....MORE

HT: Environmental Capital

Previously:

Transmission: "Economics for Tres Amigas" (AMSC; PNM)

Power Hub: Tres Amigas and the Future of Clean Energy (AMSC; PNM)

Transmission: "Drive to Link Wind, Solar Power to Distant Users " (AMSC; PNM)