Ireland: Wind power outstrips electricity demand for the first time
Ireland: Wind power outstrips electricity demand for the first time

July and August this year set new records for wind power generation in Ireland.

Ireland: Wind power outstrips electricity demand for the first time
July and August this year set new records for wind power generation in Ireland.
I think people do not realize that there is a huge bonus for the first country to unlock the "negative price energy peak" achievement.
There are some businesses that will only be possible in these conditions and they will flock to the first country with it. Generating hydrogen seems like the most straightforward one, but there are also bio-ethanol processes that require some energy to be profitable.
We see intermittency as a curse, but I think we overestimate the difficulty to adapt to an intermittent schedule and we underestimate the advantage of having time spans with free energy, especially when they happen during the day.
I wouldn't be so sure, at least yet. In Europe, everything's connected, so they'll just end up selling it to other countries.
Can imagine that it's better than selling it to random local companies for next to nothing
Yes, right now we don't see this effect because the obvious thing to do is to sell it to your neighbor so they can temporarily shut down coal or gas plants. That effect will kick in when your neighbors can't do that anymore (e.g. because they also switched to the same type of intermittent power) and there won't be any easy way to cash out on additional electricity. We are not there yet.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Wind power generation temporarily exceeded the total demand for electricity in Ireland for the first time ever this week.
Though Storm Agnes brought strong winds across the country, it isn’t unusual for it to reach this level.
What was unusual was the fact that it surpassed the demand on Ireland’s electricity grid throughout the entire island for the first time.
That meant that some of the energy was exported to Britain and Ireland had to meet the rest of the demand using fossil fuels.
In August, the amount of energy generated by wind increased by 71 per cent when compared to the same month last year.
The latest figures mean that in total, Irish wind farms provided 32 per cent of the country’s power over the first eight months of 2023.
The original article contains 438 words, the summary contains 131 words. Saved 70%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
What was unusual was the fact that it surpassed the demand on Ireland’s electricity grid throughout the entire island for the first time.
That meant that some of the energy was exported to Britain and Ireland had to meet the rest of the demand using fossil fuels.
That confused me in this summary. Looking at the actual article makes sense of that nonsense:
Currently, the country’s electricity grid is only permitted to have a maximum of 75 per cent renewables in its energy mix. That meant that some of the energy was exported to Britain and Ireland had to meet the rest of the demand using fossil fuels.
Funny how cats and windows kill orders of magnitude more