Wes Yeomans on Summer Reliability Retrospective & Modeling for Climate Change
Episode 17: Wes Yeomans on Summer Reliability Retrospective & Modeling for Climate Change
10/25/21 by New York ISO
Web player: https://podcastaddict.com/episode/130340884
Episode: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1402870/9429690-episode-17-wes-yeomans-on-summer-reliability-retrospective-modeling-for-climate-change.mp3
When Wes Yeomans speaks, people in the energy industry listen. The Vice President of Operations, Wes has three decades of energy industry experience, including more than 10 years at the NYISO. In this podcast, he tells Kevin Lanahan, Vice President of External Affairs and Corporate Communications, about how we performed in managing the electric grid last summer, our preparations for the winter ahead, and how weβre planning for a zero-emissions grid of the future. This summer saw extreme weather around the nation, with monster fires on the West Coast and unprecedented heat in the Pacific Northwest. Here in New York, tropical storms included one that brought tragic flooding to New York City; but thankfully did not involve significant difficulties in grid operations. Extreme weather from climate change is an increasing factor in grid operations, combined with the stateβs Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, which calls for significant growth of solar and wind. This includes significant offshore wind development taking shape, and the recent announcement by Governor Hochul to expand the NY Sun program to 10 gigawatts of distributed solar resources by 2030. These distributed resources displace the amount of energy that must be supplied by the transmission system that the NYISO operates. As energy production from renewable resources is dependent on weather, our grid operators must be able to predict the output of these resources in order to maintain reliability on the transmission system, he said. βWe can be off 10% today,β he said, noting that solar and wind still make up a relatively small amount of grid supply. βIf weβre off 10% three years from now, that could be a couple of thousands of megawatts. So we have to be very good, and be prepared.β Another significant change Wes discusses is the rise in electric vehicles, and trends to move from oil and natural gas to electric heat in buildings, especially downstate. The combined effects of these change, Wes said, is the likelihood that New York will change from a state that experiences its peak power demand in the summer (primarily a result of air conditioning use) to one which sees peak demand occurring in the winter. For more about how we are addressing a zero-emissions grid with market-based solutions, visit the 2040 Power Grid webpage.