bindian
Super Member
Which is where?Boy am I glad I live where I do. No water regulations here, probably never will be either.
hugs, Brandi
Which is where?Boy am I glad I live where I do. No water regulations here, probably never will be either.
They do (like out west), I don't believe so. Care to elaborate on your statement...Michigan does have water regulations.
Don't look like a bird to me Mossy...
We already made great strides in reducing pollution to where those orange clouds in your pics don't exists any more......except for the big factories that still pump out pollution. But nobody seems to worry about those, they just want to attack the homeowner and his weed eater.
Anyway, I'm taking great pleasure in watching the power grid in California fail. Bahahahaha.....have fun with your electric cars tree huggers.
Somebody opened the southern border. Maybe in a few years it will be closed again.Whatever you're reading isn't telling you the truth. The grid did fine, didn't fail like you said.
We experienced heat that has exceeded past records by substantial margins - 114 here with previous record 108 for example - and the overall system met the demand. It's not like that Texas winter case where everything went down for days and they said the windmills did it. (Actually their system control hardware wasn't winterized and didn't switch available generating resources online when needed).
A few small local-owned systems, small towns etc here, had to go to rolling blackouts due to their local insufficient distribution systems but the statewide overall grid met the challenge of this extraordinary weather. I saw many warnings that rolling blackouts might be invoked, few actually were.
Part of the overall planning is special low electric rates for users who agree to shut down when asked. Maybe that's what you read. Many electric car owners are on this plan and charge after midnight, they aren't part of the 4-9pm peak load.
We're doing ok. Now if people would quit moving here! Population 9 million when I was born, now 39 million. Nobody come here, it's too crowded!
Somebody opened the southern border. Maybe in a few years it will be closed again.Whatever you're reading isn't telling you the truth. The grid did fine, didn't fail like you said.
We experienced heat that has exceeded past records by substantial margins - 114 here with previous record 108 for example - and the overall system met the demand. It's not like that Texas winter case where everything went down for days and they said the windmills did it. (Actually their system control hardware wasn't winterized and didn't switch available generating resources online when needed).
A few small local-owned systems, small towns etc here, had to go to rolling blackouts due to their local insufficient distribution systems but the statewide overall grid met the challenge of this extraordinary weather. I saw many warnings that rolling blackouts might be invoked, few actually were.
Part of the overall planning is special low electric rates for users who agree to shut down when asked. Maybe that's what you read. Many electric car owners are on this plan and charge after midnight, they aren't part of the 4-9pm peak load.
We're doing ok. Now if people would quit moving here! Population 9 million when I was born, now 39 million. Nobody come here, it's too crowded!
Here is pasted just the 1st few pages from MI well water regulations book found here. Looks like regulation to me.They do (like out west), I don't believe so. Care to elaborate on your statement...
My only point is this whole electric future and getting rid of internal combustion is idiotic and is going to be an epic failure.They have record high heat and it wasn’t cool to start with, they are building more houses everyday ( which I’m not apposed to like some people) they’re wanting to add more load to the already suffering electric grid with electric cars. They’re nearing the point when they loose to ability to generate hydro power. The logical solution would build a nuclear power plant but their plan is to shut those down along with the coal and natural gas plants. They’ve not reached the point of collapse yet but it’s coming.