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A New Superpower Electricity Grid

By: Examiner Editorial
-
October 15, 2008

The United States has the solution to its dangerous and costly dependence on foreign oil: Electrify the transportation and heating sectors. Doing so would practically eliminate our need to import 70 percent of the oil without which our economy cannot now function. But first we need a new superpower electricity grid. The current grid, which was cobbled together by local and regional utilities from Thomas Edison’s day, is perilously close to capacity and cannot handle any significant amount of increased power generated by wind or solar sources, says Peter Huber, senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

In a study released yesterday at the National Press Club and entitled “The Million-Volt Answer to Oil,” Huber argues that America can boost its electricity production by 50 percent by building a new high-voltage overlay to the existing grid. The new superpower electricity grid would be able to do what the old one cannot - transmit large quantities of electricity long distances to urban centers that need the juice. Just one high-tech, high-voltage wire, which Huber calls “stunningly efficient,” can transmit a million volts of power, enough to propel three jumbo jets. The cost of this new superpower electricity grid - $75 billion – would add just a third of a penny per kilowatt hour to consumers’ bills. That would be more than offset by efficiency savings, since power plants now sit idle half the time because they can’t transmit electricity to where it’s needed most.

If this new superpower electricity grid isn’t built, rolling blackouts throughout the country are far from out of the question, Huber told The Examiner. Metropolitan areas along the East and West coasts are at the point where they cannot build new power plants fast enough to avert a crisis. PJM Interconnection, an independent, federally regulated regional transmission organization, has warned public officials that demand for electricity will exceed transmission capacity in 13 Mid-Atlantic states by 2011 – just three years from now. There’s literally no time to waste.

Like the federal interstate highway system, a new superpower electricity grid would foster an economic boon, since over 60 percent of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product is generated from industries that run on electricity. New technologies are making electricity generation cheaper, cleaner and more efficient than ever – if consumers can get it. But there’s a much more compelling reason that the federal government should jump-start this infrastructure project: National security. Americans will never be economically secure until we can tell the Hugo Chavezes of the world where to stick their oil.



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Reader Comments

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Ed Fitzsimons

Oct 15, 2008

Please,don't wait for a jump-start from govt.There is more than enough capital the initiate this great hi tech plan privately and/or corporately

 

Bill

Oct 15, 2008

"A million volts of power" is completely nonsensical. Power is measured in watts, not volts.

 

Roger

Oct 15, 2008

Is it a coincidence the locations with greatest needs also have strongest environmental restrictions? I think not.

 

Big Boy

Oct 15, 2008

The article says the project: "would add just a third of a penny per kilowatt hour to consumers’ bills. But, if government assists, it will cost 3 pennys a KWH to "administer" the funding.

 

harold bosnia

Oct 15, 2008

Hear Hear ! Finally an opinion in a metropolitan newspaper that is not swooning in lefty la-la-land limbo ! Did someone substitute Wheaties Breakfast of Champions for the traditional hippie granola mix editorial breakfast? Right arm ! More like that ! By the way, power *consumption*, i.e., work over time, is measured in watts, but the FORCE of the electrical field is measured in volts, so it is not 'completely nonsensical' to speak of the 'power' of a million volts -- even though sufficient current (or amperage) is needed to fan out and step down that voltage at the other end of the transmission line. (watts = amps x volts , of course )

 

harold bosnia

Oct 15, 2008

Hear Hear ! Finally an opinion in a metropolitan newspaper that is not swooning in lefty la-la-land limbo ! Did someone substitute Wheaties Breakfast of Champions for the traditional hippie granola mix editorial breakfast? Right arm ! More like that ! By the way, power *consumption*, i.e., work over time, is measured in watts, but the FORCE of the electrical field is measured in volts, so it is not 'completely nonsensical' to speak of the 'power' of a million volts -- even though sufficient current (or amperage) is needed to fan out and step down that voltage at the other end of the transmission line. (watts = amps x volts , of course )

 

Eric Ivers

Oct 15, 2008

I've been trying to tell people this for ages. Electric cars are great, but it still requires the same amount of power to move mass over distance. That power has to come from somewhere. Our current grid couldn't stand a massive conversion to electric cars.

 

Fletcher Bistle

Oct 15, 2008

Worth noting that a high-voltage grid infrastructure buildout in existing transmission line right-of-ways would be a lot easier to implement than a direct current (DC) super-conducting (super-cooled to near-absolute-zero) transmission grid technology which has been suggested as a means to directly channel electricity from solar cells.

 

gneissdoc

Oct 15, 2008

Good luck with this projected cost. The interference by the environmental NIBY's will either prolong the implementation or cause a serious inflation of the costs.

 

LS

Oct 16, 2008

Expect more than the usual amount of environmental flak. The national electric grid that we need will have the effect of removing the current need to generate power close to where it is used. It will effectively create a national market for electricity. This will not sit well with people in the northwest, or any area that is blessed with cheap hydropower, as the rest of the country will be able to bid for it, thus raising rates. I'm sure that a lot of "environmental" objections will have that behind them as the real reason.

 

LS

Oct 16, 2008

Expect more than the usual amount of environmental flak. The national electric grid that we need will have the effect of removing the current need to generate power close to where it is used. It will effectively create a national market for electricity. This will not sit well with people in the northwest, or any area that is blessed with cheap hydropower, as the rest of the country will be able to bid for it, thus raising rates. I'm sure that a lot of "environmental" objections will have that behind them as the real reason.

 

Willis

Oct 16, 2008

Nice speech. What next?

 

Oct 18, 2008

is it possible to build new electrical transmission capacity in conjunction to electrifying rail lines?

 

Reggie Jefferson

Nov 6, 2008

Can anyone provide a source for the following stat from the article? "...since over 60 percent of the U.S. Gross Domestic Product is generated from industries that run on electricity." Thank you, Reggie

 


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