Energy & Science
Biggest Power Demand Plunge Since Great Depression Is Reshaping Markets
Slowdown is squeezing coal, buoying renewables and foreshadowing “grid of the future”
By
Mark Chediak,
Chris Martin, and
Rachel Morison
May 20, 2020, 4:00 AM EDT
The global plunge in electricity demand will drag on long after nations lift stay-at-home orders, leading to the biggest annual drop since the Great Depression and fundamentally reshaping power markets.
As economies struggle to recover, worldwide electricity consumption will decline 5% in 2020, the most in more than eight decades, according to the International Energy Agency. In the U.S. last week, government analysts projected the nation’s biggest drop on record. And in Europe, analysts say a full recovery could take years.
The prolonged slowdown will increase economic pressure
The most financially threatened plants are the nuclear power plants. I wonder why they never mentioned that?
on older, uneconomic power plants -- especially those that burn coal -- and help speed the transition toward cleaner and cheaper wind and solar. It will also contribute to the biggest annual decline in greenhouse gasses from energy ever recorded.
“This unprecedented drop in demand is foreshadowing the grid of the future,” said Steve Cicala, an economics professor at the University of Chicago. The world is “getting an early look at what high penetrations of renewables will do.”
No comments:
Post a Comment