KennyG
Elite Member
Are any of these really new challenges for the power industry? You have all kinds of different power suppliers out there running different types and sizes of plants during different periods of supply and demand, fuel prices up and down, maintenance, etc. If you don't do it better than the next guy you don't succeed, it's called capitalism. There is not guarantee that if you invest in a big power plant it's going to run at 100% profit making potential for you or the next guy. Rules against solar are rules against true capitalism, but that is the way things are going these days, with industry buying the government.
The challenges today are decidedly different. The grid and generation system that was designed to cope with daily, weather related and seasonal variations in demand now has harder to predict variations in supply layers over it. Nothing in the US electricity industry today resembles capitalism. Some states block individual solar installations, some give them unfair advantages with full net metering. The wind industry gets production credit subsidies and mandates to purchase, resulting in negative wholesale electric prices and mandated shutdowns. No matter how efficient a plant is, it can't afford to pay for the privilege of generating.
The perfect example of market distortion and unintended consequences is that wind farms have very little net carbon reduction in some cases because they have forced nuclear plants to shut down and increased the generation from low capital cost gas plants.