Non-combustion electric supply more than 36% of total in fourth week of 2022
2022 week 04 US electric power supply review . . . non-combustion sources down more than 2% compared to previous week.
Electric Power Supply Review
U.S. contiguous 48 States
January 22-28, 2022
Quick summary
all non-combustion
wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric combined supplied 36.33% of total electric power generated.
solar electric
2.05% of total electric energy generated in the period.
windpower
8.72% of total electric energy generated in the period.
Note: data source for all charts is the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Hourly Electric Grid Monitor. See APPENDIX for explanation of data quality.
U.S. electric power supply: contiguous 48 States
January 22-28, 2022
Natural gas and coal combustion contributed the largest share of electric generation for the January 22-28, 2022 period. Nuclear power produced slightly less than one-fifth of the total. Windpower supplied more than four times the electric output of solar.
Total electric energy generated
84,420,525 MegaWatthours (MWH)
Non-combustion energy sources
36.33% of total
(wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric)
Hourly electric generation to meet consumers consumption demand reveals the morning consumption peak was higher than the evening peak. Nuclear generation output remained nearly constant for the period. Grid operators adjusted coal and natural gas generation to follow peaks and valleys of consumers demand, and to adjust for variable wind turbine and solar array output.
Daily totals of non-combustion electric energy sources were varied only slightly during the period.
Solar electric
The largest U.S. solar electric sources are in Texas (Central time zone) and California (Pacific time zone).
Hourly data from each region outside of the Eastern Time Zone is adjusted to Eastern. The largest solar producing region is California, where 12:00 noon Pacific Time is 3:00 PM Eastern. Texas is the second-highest solar electric producer, where 12:00 noon Central Time is 1:00 PM Eastern. Charts are affected by use of Eastern time base, with solar energy shifted to the right.
California region produced the most solar electric energy for the 7-day period
Windpower
Maximum hourly windpower outputs occurred in late evenings and overnight, complementing daytime solar. January 24 showed the best all-day performance.
Midwest region produced the most windpower for the 7-day period.
Regional windpower
Hourly windpower for January 22-28, 2022 is shown in regional charts. Times are local. Northwest, Southwest and Mid-Atlantic regions span two time zones
January 22-28 regional
windpower highlights
Most consistent
Northwest except January 26
Most underperforming
California
Most reliable 24-hour pattern
None
Hourly electric supply:
non-combustion vs. total all sources
Morning and evening peaks, afternoon and overnight valleys. Electric power generation in the followed this regular pattern in the U.S 48 contiguous States . . . January 22-28, 2022. Local utility and regional power pool organizations adjust combustion and hydroelectric power output to match consumers’ demand, and to compensate for varying wind and solar electric sources.
Charts show hourly totals of the four non-combustion generating sources collected by U.S. EIA, and total of all electric energy sources including combustion and geothermal.
Solar electric supply ramps up after the morning consumption/generation peak demand, and is declining or offline during the evening peak.
The next section examines the hourly impact of removing all combustion electric supply from the U.S. contiguous 48 States’ three electric transmission grids, and increasing wind and solar electric generating capacity by a factor of seven. Results assume that new wind and solar electric plants are at existing sites, and perform the same as older units. Other new sites, including off-shore windpower, may produce daily or seasonal production patterns which differ from existing sites.
Daily electric supply if combustion sources are eliminated and wind/solar increased 7X
The following analysis illustrates scale-up of existing U.S. wind and solar electric generating capacity, and elimination of combustion generation sources. Nuclear and hydroelectric capacity now in service remain changed. Charts illustrate this scenario for each day January 22-28, 2022.
Total actual U.S. hourly generated electric energy supply is represented in the following charts by a gray line:
includes all electric generating sources: wind, solar, hydroelectric, nuclear, natural gas, coal, petroleum, geothermal..
is an estimate of U.S. electric consumers’ hourly consumption.
does not include electric energy imports or exports with Canada and Mexico via electric transmission lines.
Actual wind and solar hourly electric supply are shown as dashed green and yellow lines.
Arrows in the first 24-hour chart illustrate possible shifting of excess wind or solar stored in batteries or other systems to fill later shortages when consumer electric demand exceeds variable weather-dependent electric supply.
Appendix
data source
U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Hourly Electric Grid Monitor is the source for data for this report. EIA provides this disclaimer:
Disclaimer: The information submitted by reporting entities is preliminary data and is made available "as-is" by EIA. Neither EIA nor reporting entities are responsible for reliance on the data for any specific use.
Factors which may affect future electric power transfers among U.S. regions
inadequacy of existing transmission grid to move large amounts of electric power between regions.
new transmission line construction delays due to right-of-way acquisition and State/local jurisdiction issues.
States, Balancing Authorities and Regions priorities for use of potential excess variable wind/solar electric energy, such as:
a) export electric energy to other Balancing Authorities or Regions.
b) store electric energy, instead of export, for later consumption.
c) consume electric energy immediately produced for electric transportation, water and indoor space heating, cold storage for air-conditioning, and other uses for which consumption may be controlled to synchronize with variable energy sources production.
d) hydroelectric supply replacement due to Western U.S. drought.
e) nuclear electric supply replacement due to plant closures.
Strong performance for both wind and solar energy January 15, 18 & 19
2022 week 03 US electric power supply review . . . non-combustion sources supplied 38.96% of total electric energy generated.
Electric Power Supply Review
U.S. contiguous 48 States
January 15-21, 2022
Quick summary
non-combustion
wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric combined supplied 38.96% of total electric power generated.
adding wind and solar energy capacity 7X existing would be adequate to supply consumer hourly consumption January 18-19 without battery storage or backup fossil fuel combustion generation.
solar electric
1.74% of total electric energy generated in the period.
windpower
11.04% of total electric energy generated in the period.
reduced output January 16-17, 20.
Note: see APPENDIX for discussion of EIA data sources and trans-grid electric power transfers.
U.S. hourly electric power supply - contiguous 48 States
January 15-21, 2022
Natural gas and coal combustion contributed the largest share of electric generation for the January 15-21, 2022 period. Nuclear power produced about one-fifth of the total. Windpower supplied more than five times the electric output of solar.
Total electric energy generated
82,845,172 MegaWatthours (MWH)
Non-combustion energy sources
38.96% of total
(wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric)
Solar electric
The largest U.S. solar electric sources are in Texas (Central time zone) and California (Pacific time zone). Daily solar production maximums are shifted in the chart due to chart times are Eastern zone.
maximum day
January 18
247,161 MWHminimum day
January 15
150,777 MWH7-day total
1,444,951 MWHdaily high-to-low
variation: 39.00%
Windpower
Mid’-day January 10 and most hours January 12-13 were periods of reduced windpower generation. These wind slowdowns caused an increase in combustion electric generation - (see next two sections, below). No daily pattern of repeating daily highs and lows at regular times of day developed during the 7 days.
maximum day
January 19
1,728,567 MWHminimum day
January 16
934,312 MWH7-day total
9,142,183 MWHdaily high-to-low
variation: 45.95%
Regional windpower
Hourly windpower for January 15-21, 2022 is shown in regional charts. Chart times are local. Northwest, Southwest and Mid-Atlantic regions span two time zones
- - -
January 15-21 regional
windpower highlights
Most consistent
Northwest except January 19
Most underperforming
California
Most reliable daily cycle
None
The next section examines the hourly impact of removing all combustion electric supply from the U.S. contiguous 48 States’ three electric transmission grids, and increasing wind and solar electric generating capacity by a factor of seven. Results assume that new wind and solar electric plants are at existing sites, and perform the same as older units. Other new sites, such as off-shore windpower, may produce daily or seasonal production patterns which differ from existing sites.
Daily electric supply if combustion sources are eliminated and wind/solar increased 7X
The following analysis illustrates scale-up of existing U.S. wind and solar electric generating capacity, and elimination of combustion generation sources. Nuclear and hydroelectric capacity now in service remain changed. Charts illustrate this scenario for each day January 15-21, 2022.
Total actual U.S. hourly generated electric energy supply is represented in the following charts by a gray line:
includes all electric generating sources: wind, solar, hydroelectric, nuclear, natural gas, coal, petroleum and other.
is an estimate of U.S. electric consumers’ hourly consumption.
does not include electric energy imports or exports with Canada and Mexico via electric transmission lines.
Actual wind and solar hourly electric supply are shown as dashed green and yellow lines.
Arrows indicate when excess wind or solar stored in batteries or other systems could be released to fill gaps between consumer electric demand and variable weather-dependent supply. No arrows mean supply is adequate for the day, or storage capacity of 4-6 hours was exhausted in previous days.
Earlier charts of actual hourly wind and solar energy production show strong performance from both sources January 18-19. In the 7X wind and solar scenario, charts show these days to have more than adequate electric supply to replace current fossil-fuel generation without energy storage to fill energy supply shortages.
Appendix
data source
U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Hourly Electric Grid Monitor is the source for data for this report. EIA provides this disclaimer:
Disclaimer: The information submitted by reporting entities is preliminary data and is made available "as-is" by EIA. Neither EIA nor reporting entities are responsible for reliance on the data for any specific use.
Factors which may affect future electric power transfers among U.S. regions
inadequacy of existing transmission grid to move large amounts of electric power between regions.
new transmission line construction delays due to right-of-way acquisition and State/local jurisdiction issues.
States, Balancing Authorities and Regions priorities for use of potential excess variable wind/solar electric energy, such as:
a) export electric energy to other Balancing Authorities or Regions.
b) store electric energy, instead of export, for later consumption.
c) consume electric energy immediately produced for electric transportation, water and indoor space heating, cold storage for air-conditioning, and other uses for which consumption may be controlled to synchronize with variable energy sources production.
d) hydroelectric supply replacement due to Western U.S. drought.
e) nuclear electric supply replacement due to plant closures.
Windpower supplied more than 5X compared to solar in 2nd week 2022
Wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric combined supplied 40.26% of total electric power generated.
Electric Power Supply Review
Hourly & Daily
U.S. contiguous 48 States
January 8-14, 2022
Quick summary
non-combustion
wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric combined supplied 40.26% of total electric power generated.
adding wind and solar energy capacity 7X existing would be adequate to supply consumer hourly consumption some days without battery storage or backup fossil fuel combustion generation.
solar electric
1.99% of total electric energy generated in the period.
windpower
10.82% of total electric energy generated in the period.
reduced output January 10, 12-13.
Note: see APPENDIX for discussion of EIA data sources and trans-grid electric power transfers.
U.S. hourly electric power supply - contiguous 48 States
January 8-14, 2022
Natural gas and coal combustion contributed the largest share of electric generation for the January 8-14, 2022 period. Nuclear power produced about one-fifth of the total. Windpower supplied more than five times the electric output of solar.
Total electric energy generated
79,377,045 MegaWatthours (MWH)
Non-combustion energy sources
40.26% of total
(wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric)
Solar electric
The largest U.S. solar electric sources are in Texas (Central time zone) and California (Pacific time zone). Daily solar production maximums are shifted in the chart due to chart times are Eastern zone.
A late-day spike in apparent solar electric generation January 13 is due to data from Florida. Cause is unknown.
maximum day
January 11
251,284 MWH
minimum day
January 9
194,878 MWH
7-day total
1,576,331 MWH
daily high-to-low
variation: 22.45%
Windpower
Mid’-day January 10 and most hours January 12-13 were periods of reduced windpower generation. These wind slowdowns caused an increase in combustion electric generation - (see next two sections, below). No daily pattern of repeating daily highs and lows at regular times of day developed during the 7 days.
maximum day
January 8
1,727,394 MWH
minimum day
January 13
696,786 MWH
7-day total
8,588,681 MWH
daily high-to-low
variation: 59.66%
All non-combustion sources
Nuclear generation supplied the largest amount of non-combustion electric energy in the U.S. 48 contiguous States January 8-14, 2022. Windpower was the most variable from day to day.
Regional windpower
January 8-14 regional
windpower highlights
Most consistent
Northwest
Most underperforming
California
Most reliable daily cycle
None
Hourly windpower for January 8-14, 2022 is shown in regional charts (below). Chart times are local. Northwest and Mid-Atlantic regions span two time zones
The next section examines the hourly impact of removing all combustion electric supply from the U.S. contiguous 48 States’ three electric transmission grids, and increasing wind and solar electric generating capacity by a factor of seven. Results assume that new wind and solar electric plants are at existing sites, and perform the same as older units. Other new sites, such as off-shore windpower, may produce daily or seasonal production patterns which differ from existing sites.
Daily electric supply if combustion sources are eliminated and wind/solar increased 7X
The following analysis illustrates scale-up of existing U.S. wind and solar electric generating capacity, and elimination of combustion generation sources. Nuclear and hydroelectric capacity now in service are not changed.
Total actual U.S. hourly generated electric energy supply is represented in the following charts by a gray line:
includes all electric generating sources: wind, solar, hydroelectric, nuclear, natural gas, coal, petroleum and other.
is an estimate of U.S. electric consumers’ hourly consumption.
does not include electric energy imports or exports with Canada and Mexico via electric transmission lines.
Actual wind and solar hourly electric supply are shown as dashed green and yellow lines.
Arrows indicate when excess wind or solar stored in batteries or other systems could be released to fill gaps between consumer electric demand and variable weather-dependent supply. No arrows mean supply is adequate for the day, or storage capacity of 4-6 hours was exhausted in previous days.
Appendix
data source
U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Hourly Electric Grid Monitor is the source for data for this report. EIA provides this disclaimer:
Disclaimer: The information submitted by reporting entities is preliminary data and is made available "as-is" by EIA. Neither EIA nor reporting entities are responsible for reliance on the data for any specific use.
Factors which may affect future electric power transfers among U.S. regions
inadequacy of existing transmission grid to move large amounts of electric power between regions.
new transmission line construction delays due to right-of-way acquisition and State/local jurisdiction issues.
States, Balancing Authorities and Regions priorities for use of potential excess variable wind/solar electric energy, such as:
a) export electric energy to other Balancing Authorities or Regions.
b) store electric energy, instead of export, for later consumption.
c) consume electric energy immediately produced for electric transportation, water and indoor space heating, cold storage for air-conditioning, and other uses for which consumption may be controlled to synchronize with variable energy sources production.
d) hydroelectric supply replacement due to Western U.S. drought.
e) nuclear electric supply replacement due to plant closures.
U.S. windpower declined a few days in 1st week of 2022, natural gas combustion increased
Non-combustion energy sources — wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric — combined supplied 41.92% of total electric power generated in the United States contiguous 48 States.
Electric Power Supply Review
Hourly & Daily
January 1-7, 2022
Lubbock County, TX, USA
Photo by Pete Alexopoulos on Unsplash
Quick summary
all non-combustion
wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric combined supplied 41.92% of total electric power generated . . . contribution of geothermal electric is unknown due to lack of this category in U.S. EIA data collection
solar electric
1.85% of total electric energy generated in the period
windpower
12.16% of total electric energy generated in the period
a 28-hour slowdown January 2-3
Note: see APPENDIX for discussion of EIA Data Source and trans-grid electric power transfers.
U.S. hourly electric power supply
January 1-7, 2022
Natural gas and coal combustion contributed the largest share of electric generation for the January 1-7, 2022 period.
Non-combustion energy sources — wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric — combined supplied 41.92% of total electric power generated in the United States contiguous 48 States during the period.
Solar electric
The largest U.S. solar electric sources are in Texas (Central time zone) and California (Pacific time zone). Daily solar production maximums are shifted in the chart due to chart times are Eastern zone.
Windpower
Noon January 2 through 4:00 PM January 3 was a period of extended reduced windpower generation. A similar slowdown occurred between 3:00 PM January 6 to 1:00 PM January 7.
Natural gas and coal
Natural gas combustion increased in days when windpower production declined. Daily up/down pattern of combustion fuel consumption coincides with aggregated consumers’ hourly electric demands.
Combined wind and solar electric
Combined wind and solar electric consistency was affected by wind reductions January 2-3 and January 6-7.
Regional windpower
Hourly windpower for January 1 - 7, 2022 is shown in regional charts (below). All chart times are Eastern Zone.
Regional patterns and irregularities
Northwest
Early morning maximums January 2, 3, 4.
Sharp decline early morning January 6.
California
No pattern.
Low production January 1-3 and January 5-6.
Texas
No pattern.
Low production January 2 and January 7.
Central
No pattern.
Midwest
No pattern.
Low production January 2 and January 7.
The next section examines the hourly impact of removing all combustion electric supply from the U.S. contiguous 48 States’ three electric transmission grids, and increasing wind and solar electric generating capacity by a factor of seven. Results assume that new wind and solar electric plants are at existing sites, and perform the same as older units. Other new sites, such as off-shore windpower, may produce daily or seasonal production patterns which differ from existing sites.
Daily electric supply if combustion sources are eliminated and wind/solar increased 7X
The following analysis illustrates scale-up of existing U.S. wind and solar electric generating capacity, and elimination of combustion generation sources. Nuclear and hydroelectric capacity now in service are not changed.
Total actual U.S. hourly generated electric energy supply is represented in the following charts by a gray line:
includes all electric generating sources: wind, solar, hydroelectric, nuclear, natural gas, coal, petroleum and other.
is an estimate of actual U.S. electric consumers’ hourly consumption.
does not include electric energy imports or exports with Canada and Mexico via electric transmission lines.
Actual wind and solar hourly electric supply are shown as dashed lines. Color-shaded areas represent hourly wind and solar increased by a factor of 7 from actual.
Arrows indicate when excess wind or solar stored in batteries or other systems could be released to fill gaps between consumer electric demand and variable weather-dependent supply. No arrows mean supply is adequate for the day, or energy storage capacity was exhausted in previous days.
Appendix
data source
U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Hourly Electric Grid Monitor is the source for data for this report. EIA provides this disclaimer:
Disclaimer: The information submitted by reporting entities is preliminary data and is made available "as-is" by EIA. Neither EIA nor reporting entities are responsible for reliance on the data for any specific use.
Factors which may affect future electric power transfers among U.S. regions
inadequacy of existing transmission grid to move large amounts of electric power between regions.
new transmission line construction delays due to right-of-way acquisition and State/local jurisdiction issues.
States, Balancing Authorities and Regions priorities for use of potential excess variable wind/solar electric energy, such as:
a) export electric energy to other Balancing Authorities or Regions.
b) store electric energy, instead of export, for later consumption.
c) consume electric energy immediately produced for electric transportation, water and indoor space heating, cold storage for air-conditioning, and other uses for which consumption may be controlled to synchronize with variable energy sources production.
d) hydroelectric supply replacement due to Western U.S. drought.
e) nuclear electric supply replacement due to plant closures.
Non-combustion electric sources nearly 40% of total electric power generated in late September 2021
Nuclear energy was the biggest source of U.S. non-combustion electricity . . . September 22-28, 2021
Electric Power Supply Review
Hourly & Daily
September 22 - 28, 2021
United States regions of greatest windpower
Quick summary
windpower
10.21% of total electric energy generated in the period
strongest in late evening and early A.M. hours most days
high-to-low daily totals differed by 37.8%
solar electric
2.92% of total electric energy generated in the period
high-to-low daily totals differed by 22.4%
all non-combustion
wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric combined supplied 39.7% of total electric power generated
Note: see APPENDIX for discussion of Time Zones, Data Source, and Transmission Access
U.S. hourly electric power supply
September 22-28, 2021
Natural gas and coal combustion contributed the largest share of electric generation for the September 22-28, 2021 period.
Non-combustion energy sources — wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric — combined supplied 39.75% of total electric power generated in the United States contiguous 48 States during the period.
Solar electric
The largest U.S. solar electric sources are Texas (Central time zone) and California (Pacific time zone). Daily solar production maximums in the chart are shifted 1 to 2 hours due to chart times are Eastern zone.
highest hourly maximum
329,318
Sept 25lowest hourly maximum
255,647
Sept 21minimum is less than maximum
22.4%
Windpower
U.S. windpower generation produced late-evening or early-overnight highs in each of the seven days.
highest hourly maximum
1,278,491
Sept 26lowest hourly maximum
795,310
Sept 22minimum is less than maximum
37.8%
Combined wind and solar electric
Wind and solar electric energy daily production were complementary. Solar electric production increased mid-mornings when windpower declined, and wind increased most evenings as solar declined.
The second chart in this section shows hourly wind and solar electric production combined. The resulting total is the top edge of the green area.
Regional windpower
Hourly windpower for the September 22-28, 2021 period is shown in regional charts. All chart times are Eastern Zone.
Maximum windpower time of of day varied by region:
Northwest > no regular pattern
California > midnight + /- a few hours
Texas > midnight + /- a few hours, except Sept 23
Central > midnight + /- a few hours, except Sept 23 and 24
Midwest > no regular pattern
The next section examines the hourly impact of removing all combustion electric supply from the U.S. contiguous 48 States’ three electric transmission grids, and increasing wind and solar electric generating capacity by a factor of seven. Results assume that new wind and solar electric plants are at existing sites, and perform the same as older units. Other new sites, such as off-shore windpower, may produce daily or seasonal production patterns which differ from existing sites.
Daily electric supply if combustion sources are eliminated and wind/solar increased 7X
The following analysis illustrates scale-up for existing U.S. wind and solar electric generating capacity, and elimination of combustion generation sources. Nuclear and hydroelectric capacity now in service are not changed.
Total actual U.S. hourly generated electric energy supply is represented in the following charts by a gray line:
includes all electric generating sources: wind, solar, hydroelectric, nuclear, natural gas, coal, petroleum and other.
is an estimate of actual U.S. electric consumers’ hourly consumption.
does not include electric energy imports or exports via electric transmission lines with Canada and Mexico.
Color-shaded areas represent hourly wind and solar increased by a factor of 7 from actual. Actual wind and solar hourly electric supply are shown as dashed lines.
Arrows indicate times when excess wind or solar collected and collected in batteries or other systems storage systems may be released during electric supply shortages. If no excess supply is present, or hourly electric generation is adequate to supply consumption demand without storage, no arrows are shown.
Daily summary:
7 X wind & solar electric adequacy to replace combustion generation
Sept 22 - no
Sept 23 - yes
Sept 24 - yes
Sept 25 - yes
Sept 26 - yes
Sept 27 - yes
Sept 28 - yes
Appendix
time zones
Hourly charts in this report are based on Eastern time. Compared to local time at generator sites, hourly MWhr results are shifted to later in the day if the generator is not in the Eastern time zone:
1 hour: Central time zone - Midwest, Great Plains, Texas
2 hours: Mountain time zone
3 hours: Pacific time zone - Northwest, California
data source
U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Hourly Electric Grid Monitor is the source for data for this report. EIA provides this disclaimer:
Disclaimer: The information submitted by reporting entities is preliminary data and is made available "as-is" by EIA. Neither EIA nor reporting entities are responsible for reliance on the data for any specific use.
transmission access
Factors which may affect future electric power transfers among U.S. regions
inadequacy of existing transmission grid to move large amounts of electric power between regions
new transmission line construction right-of-way acquisition and State/local jurisdiction issues
States, Balancing Authorities and regions priorities for use of potential excess variable wind/solar electric energy:
a) export to other BA’s or regions
b) store and consume with no export
c) consume electric energy when produced by electrification of transport, water and indoor space heating, and other fuel-switching to electric energyhydroelectric supply reduction due to drought
nuclear electric supply reduction due to plant closures
other
U.S. daily windpower supply varied 47% from high to low in mid’-September 2021
Big swing from highest to lowest windpower days across the U.S. in last week of summer.
U.S. Electric Power Supply Review
Hourly & Daily
September 15 - 21, 2021
Quick summary
windpower
9.04% of total electric energy generated in the period
strongest in late evening and early A.M. hours most days
high-to-low daily totals differed 47%
solar electric
2.58% of total electric energy generated in the period
high-to-low daily totals differed 20%
all non-combustion
wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric combined supplied 35.25% of total electric power generated
Note: see APPENDIX for discussion of Time Zones, Data Source, and Transmission Access
U.S. hourly electric power supply
September 15-21, 2021
Natural gas and coal combustion contributed the largest share of electric generation for the September 15-21, 2021 period.
Non-combustion energy sources — wind, solar, nuclear and hydroelectric — combined supplied 35.25% of total electric power generated in the United States contiguous 48 States during the period.
Solar electric
Solar production maximums in the chart are shifted from 11 AM - 1 PM to 1 - 3 PM due to chart times are Eastern zone, and largest solar supplies are in Texas (Central) and California (Pacific).
Windpower
Windpower generation produced late-evening and early-overnight highs in each of the seven days. Lowest windpower production day was September 15.
Combined wind and solar electric
Wind and solar electric energy daily production were complementary. Solar electric production increased mid-mornings when windpower declined, and wind increased most evenings as solar declined.
The second chart in this section shows hourly wind and solar electric production combined. The resulting total is the top edge of the green area.
Regional windpower:
highest production overnight
Texas, the Midwest, Central/Great Plains, California and northwest States are regions of greatest windpower. Maximum electric energy generation usually occurred late-evenings or overnight in these zones September 15-21, 2021.
Northwest
Hourly wind electric generation September 15-21, 2021 did not reveal a daily pattern in the Northwest region. The top windpower producing States are Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Wyoming.
California
Strongest windpower generation occurred evenings and overnight in California, except September 20 and 21. Lowest production occurred September 21.
Texas
Texas is the highest windpower producing U.S. State. The late-evening and early-overnight maximum production pattern was consistent in all but the last day of the September 15-21 period.
Central
Windpower generation in the Central region did not follow a consistent daily pattern September 15-21, 2021. Lowest daily production occurred September 18.
Midwest
Hourly wind electric generation September 15-21, 2021 was highest in late evenings, except September 18 and 21.
The next section examines the hourly impact of removing all combustion electric supply from the U.S. contiguous 48 States’ three electric transmission grids, and increasing wind and solar electric generating capacity by a factor of seven. Results assume that new wind and solar electric plants are at existing sites, and perform the same as older units. Other new sites, such as off-shore windpower, may produce daily or seasonal production patterns which differ from existing sites.
September 15, 2021
U.S. non-combustion & total hourly electric supply
Total U.S. hourly generated electric energy supply is shown by the gray line in the following series of daily charts. Total includes includes wind, solar, hydroelectric and nuclear shown by color areas, as well as natural gas, coal, petroleum and other. Electric energy imported via electric transmission lines from Canada and Mexico are not included.
The first chart shows actual hourly electric generation. September 15 was the lowest windpower production day of the 7-day period.
September 15, 2021
7X wind & solar
In the following examples, actual hourly U.S. contiguous 48-States solar and wind electric energy supplies are multiplied by 7. These expanded non-combustion sources, combined with existing nuclear and hydroelectric power generating capacity, would have been inadequate to replace combustion generation sources during all hours of September 15, due to low windpower supply.
Actual wind and solar hourly electric supply for September 15 are shown as dashed lines.
September 16, 2021
7X wind & solar
If wind and solar electric energy generation were each increased by 7 times, these sources combined with existing nuclear and hydroelectric power generating capacity would have been adequate to replace combustion generation nearly all hours September 16. Oversupply captured in batteries or other systems storage systems may be released during the brief evening real-time generation shortage.
September 17, 2021
7X wind & solar
A U.S electric supply consisting of existing nuclear and hydroelectric, plus 7X wind/solar, would have been inadequate to replace combustion electric generation day September 17, 2021. Actual solar and wind electric generation were lower compared to most days of the 7-day period.
September 18, 2021
7X wind & solar
The hypothetical 7X wind/solar plus existing nuclear and hydroelectric generating scenario would have would not have produced enough electric energy to match actual September 11, 2021 power supply which included coal and natural gas combustion sources.
September 19, 2021
7X wind & solar
The hypothetical 7X wind/solar plus existing nuclear and hydroelectric generating scenario would have been adequate to replace combustion electric generation in all hours September 19, 2021 — the 3rd highest day for wind actual electric generation of the 7-day period.
September 20, 2021
7X wind & solar
Another day in which 7X wind/solar plus existing nuclear and hydroelectric generating would have been adequate to replace combustion electric generation in all hours. September 20 was the highest day for wind actual electric generation of the 7-day period.
September 21, 2021
7X wind & solar
Actual windpower production remained relatively strong in the afternoon September 21, compared to the previous 6 days. Solar electric supply was the lowest of the 7-day period. In a U.S. electric grid enhanced with 7X wind/solar an no combustion generation, oversupply captured in batteries or other systems storage systems earlier in the day may be released during the evening generation shortage.
Appendix
time zones
Hourly charts in this report are based on Eastern time. Compared to local time at generator sites, hourly MWhr results are shifted to later in the day if the generator is not in the Eastern time zone:
1 hour: Central time zone - Midwest, Great Plains, Texas
2 hours: Mountain time zone
3 hours: Pacific time zone - Northwest, California
data source
U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Hourly Electric Grid Monitor is the source for data for this report. EIA provides this disclaimer:
Disclaimer: The information submitted by reporting entities is preliminary data and is made available "as-is" by EIA. Neither EIA nor reporting entities are responsible for reliance on the data for any specific use.
transmission access
Factors which may affect future electric power transfers among U.S. regions
inadequacy of existing transmission grid to move large amounts of electric power between regions
new transmission line construction right-of-way acquisition and State/local jurisdiction issues
States, Balancing Authorities and regions priorities for use of potential excess variable wind/solar electric energy:
a) export to other BA’s or regions
b) store and consume with no export
c) consume electric energy when produced by electrification of transport, water and indoor space heating, and other fuel-switching to electric energyhydroelectric supply reduction due to drought
nuclear electric supply reduction due to plant closures
other
Colorado Electric Energy Scorecard
2017, 2018 and 2019-YTD trends for Colorado’s electric energy supply.
A pictorial review of year-to-year recent trends through May 2019.
Natural gas-combustion, wind-powered, and solar electric energy are increasing, coal-fired generation is declining.
Linecurrents related reports:
Electric energy generated by coal combusttion in Colorado through May 2019 totalled 10,230 gigaWathours (GWhr) — 462 GWhr and 4.7% greater than the same period in 2018.
Colorado Wind+Solar Electric Energy: 2018 Combined
Wind and solar electric energy supply is least when Colorado consumer demand is greatest.
Utility-scale windturbine electric generators supplied 9-times more electric energy than solar sources in 2018.
Variable wind & solar monthly energy production was out-of-sync with ups-and-downs of Colorado consumers’ Spring & Summer demand.
Colorado Wind and Solar 2018 Electric Energy Production Compared
Colorado’s utility-scale solar electric energy sites generated 1,0897.3 gigaWatthours (GWhrs) in 2018. (Figure 1)
Utility-scale windpower sites supplied 9,795.5 GWhrs. (Figure 1)
- Notes -
The following are equal amounts of electric energy:
1 gigaWatthour
GWhr
1,000 megaWatthours
MWhrs
1,000,000 kiloWatthours
KWhrs
Figure 1: Linecurrents chart, US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data. Tap/click to enlarge.
Wind and Solar Electric Energy Monthly Comparison:
Colorado 2018
Windturbines generated the most electric energy in Winter and Spring. A reduction in February 2018 may be due to fewer days in the month. (Figure 2)
Wind turbine electric energy - highest months
December
1,026.4 GWhrMarch
997.9 GWhrApril
989.9 GWhr
Solar electric generating sites performed best in Summer months. (Figure 2)
Solar electric energy - highest months
June
127.9 GWhrAugust
113.1 GWhrJuly
112.2 GWhr
Figure 2: Linecurrents chart, US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data. Tap/click to enlarge.
Wind+Solar and Total Power Supply: Colorado 2018 - Monthly
Wind and solar electric energy generating sources supplied about one-fourth of Colorado utility consumers’ needs in April 2018, when 12-month electric energy consumption was least and wind/solar combined production was greatest (Figures 3 & 4):
April
4,063 GWhr total supply
1,092 GWhr wind/solar
Combined wind and solar electric energy output declined in July. In the same month, total power supply generated from all sources to meet Colorado consumers’ needs reached annual maximum. July solar/wind energy combined production supplied only one-seventh of the total Colorado power requirement (Figures 3 & 4).
July
5,494 GWhr total supply
773 GWhr wind/solar
Figure 3: Linecurrents chart, US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data. Tap/click to enlarge.
Figure 4: Linecurrents chart, US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data. Tap/click to enlarge.
How much more solar electric energy is needed to equal windpower?
If Colorado’s 2018 utility-scale solar electric energy supply is increased to nine-times actual, annual solar electric energy nearly equals wind electric energy (Figure 5).
Wind energy
9,795.5 GWhr9X Solar
9,758.7 GWhr
Figure 5: Linecurrents chart, US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data. Tap/click to enlarge.
Will a big increase in solar electric sync-up with July maximum consumers’ needs?
More solar energy generating sites would have reduced the load on fossil-fuel power generation, but not solve the wind/solar July dip. (Figure 6: Wind + 9X Solar - gray line).
In April, when consumers’ electric power demand is lowest, Wind + 9X Solar electric energy combination in a balanced wind/solar power scenario grows to nearly half of the month’s power supply requirement.
Figure 6: Linecurrents chart, US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data. Tap/click to enlarge.