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Transitioning to Renewable Energy Will Be Tricky in NH


By GARRY RAYNO, Distant Dome

Winter is fading and summer is waiting.

Winter was mild with little snow this year until April, and last summer was the hottest on record.

The ocean temperatures in the Gulf of Maine last summer were the warmest they have ever been, which is great for swimming at usually cold Hampton Beach, but not so great for the climate.

New England, like most of the developed world, is in the midst of developing strategies for reducing the fossil fuel emissions driving climate change.

The push for electric vehicles and for heating buildings with electricity instead of fossil fuels also spikes the demand for power.

Today in New England the vast majority of electricity is generated by burning natural gas, while far less harmful than coal or oil, it is a fossil fuel and a global hot commodity, especially liquified natural gas which New England relies on to produce electricity in the winter when most of the natural gas supplies are allocated for home heating.

And that will be a growing problem in the near future according to the ISO New England, which manages the wholesale electric market for the region, as New Hampshire and other New England states return to a winter peak demand region in the mid 2030s instead of the current summer peak demand driven by air conditioning.

ISO-New England released its 2024 Regional Electricity Outlook last week and it paints a very complex, inter-related and arduous path for the region’s transition to renewable energy as the main source of power generation.

While most of New England has greatly expanded the use of renewable sources of power, New Hampshire on the tail end, much of it is “behind the meter” which means it is used where it is generated and never goes onto the grid.

The increase in solar — and to some extent wind — is enough to drive down demand significantly in the summer, which creates its own problems with day-ahead energy forecasts and the weather.

And the large wind and solar resources are reduced by the more extreme weather experienced the past few years.

The ISO also notes improved battery storage technology will be needed to increase capacity, but warns when it is needed most — in the winter when natural gas for producing electricity is scarce and expensive — is when it is least efficient.

And the most reliable and cheapest renewable energy resource for New England and New York has been hydro power from Hydro Quebec, which now faces pressure from the provincial government to retain its available resources to meet the growing demand at home driven by large users like Amazon and General Motors that were lured to the province by cheap electricity.

And Hydro Quebec is still under contract to provide 2,400 megawatts of power to two major Northeast projects under construction, Champlain Hudson Power Express and New England Clean Energy Connect through Maine for Massachusetts customers.

So the ISO warns that despite the push to end the burning of fossil fuels, the uncertainty of renewable resources today requires “some amount of flexible, dispatchable resources —whether they are carbon-emitting or not — will continue to play a role in filling supply gaps and ensuring the reliable flow of electricity.”

And the ISO urges all stakeholders to jump on the bandwagon, saying “At the same time, it is increasingly imperative for the energy industry, affected communities, and siting bodies and policymakers to overcome obstacles that have kept some projects from coming to fruition.”

Earlier this spring National Grid decided its Twin State Energy Link project was not feasible at this time.

The 1,200 megawatt transmission project running from Quebec through Vermont and New Hampshire largely in existing transmission corridors, would have been bi-directional allowing Hydro-Quebec power to flow to New England and anticipated wind power from Southern New England offshore wind farms to flow to Canada.

National Grid did not say why it pulled out, but the availability of Hydro-Quebec power is likely one reason, and the slow development of the proposed offshore wind projects is likely another reason. More utilities are pulling out of offshore projects than are jumping in right now.

The National Grid project had won US Department of Energy approval for transmission projects guaranteeing backstop purchases of power to ensure financing, and New England states are also seeking similar backing for two other projects, Power Up New England, and Clean Reliance Link.

Power Up New England would construct transmission lines to access wind farms in Northern Maine and offshore in Southern New…



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