Buy low and sell high. They can find surplus power and buy it cheap, then wait until there are unmet demands and sell high.
These crazy things called computers make creating and automating markets like that pretty easy :)
It's win win - the people with surplus power can at least get some money for energy that would otherwise likely go to waste (large base load power plants can't ramp up and down on a dime) and on the flip side if you have an energy provider that only occasionally needs capacity in excess of their inherent generation even though the immediate cost is higher for spot power, it can still be far cheaper in the long term than building more base load generation (often fossil fuel because renewable still isn't a viable replacement for base loads). And running base load generation under capacity is wasteful for emissions and overall efficiency.
Once we start to crack the whole energy storage thing renewables will be A LOT more valuable since we will be able to start to use them for base load. Storage allows you to create reliable energy delivery that's predictable - that's essential if we ever want to eject fossil fuels from the grid. Or we could stop being childish about nuclear power - frankly I think we can solve the storage problem long before we can convince people to be rational about nuclear :p
It probably seems crazy for the uninitiated, but there are a lot of efficiencies in markets that occur naturally over time. You see distortions in the market from CA's stupid and politically motivated choices - what seems crazy to you is the market adapting to the model that CA is forcing. Is it nuts? Yup. Is it necessary? Nope - these wounds are entirely self inflicted. Pretending the world is different than it actually is doesn't solve anything and the people of CA are paying a hell of a lot more for electricity because they are trying to live in a pipe dream for where we are today.
These crazy things called computers make creating and automating markets like that pretty easy :)
It's win win - the people with surplus power can at least get some money for energy that would otherwise likely go to waste (large base load power plants can't ramp up and down on a dime) and on the flip side if you have an energy provider that only occasionally needs capacity in excess of their inherent generation even though the immediate cost is higher for spot power, it can still be far cheaper in the long term than building more base load generation (often fossil fuel because renewable still isn't a viable replacement for base loads). And running base load generation under capacity is wasteful for emissions and overall efficiency.
Once we start to crack the whole energy storage thing renewables will be A LOT more valuable since we will be able to start to use them for base load. Storage allows you to create reliable energy delivery that's predictable - that's essential if we ever want to eject fossil fuels from the grid. Or we could stop being childish about nuclear power - frankly I think we can solve the storage problem long before we can convince people to be rational about nuclear :p
It probably seems crazy for the uninitiated, but there are a lot of efficiencies in markets that occur naturally over time. You see distortions in the market from CA's stupid and politically motivated choices - what seems crazy to you is the market adapting to the model that CA is forcing. Is it nuts? Yup. Is it necessary? Nope - these wounds are entirely self inflicted. Pretending the world is different than it actually is doesn't solve anything and the people of CA are paying a hell of a lot more for electricity because they are trying to live in a pipe dream for where we are today.