https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Unprecedented-Blackouts-And-6-Gasoline-Californias-Energy-Crisis.html?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=push_notification&utm_campaign=vwo_notification_1570850529&_p_c=1
Millions of Californians may have just suffered an unprecedented, induced blackout
by the state's largest (and bankrupt) utility, PG&E, just so it
isn't blamed for starting even more fires causing it to go even more
bankrupt... but at least the price of gas is soaring.
According to Fox5NY,
citing figures from AAA and the Oil Price Information Service, the
average price of a gallon of regular gasoline in Los Angeles County was
$4.25 on Wednesday, 4.5 cents higher than one week ago, 57.6 cents more
than one month ago and 37.1 cents greater than one year ago. It has also
risen 86.4 cents since the start of the year. What is more troubling is
that as California gas prices reached the highest level in the state
since 2015, some Los Angeles area gas stations are charging more than $5 a gallon.
The gas price spike started last month after Saudi Arabia
oil production facilities were attacked, and accelerated after three Los
Angeles-area refineries slowed or halted production due to maintenance
issues and no imported gasoline was available to make up for the
shortfall, according to Jeffrey Spring, the Automobile Club of Southern
California's corporate communications manager.
The
shortage was made worse after local refineries cut back production of
summer-blend gasoline in anticipation of switching to selling the winter
blend beginning Nov. 1.
But wait, there's more:
America's most "environmentally conscious" state got a harsh lesson in
electrical engineering when many of the tens of thousands of people hit
by this week's blackout learned the hard way that solar installations
don't keep the lights on during a power outage. Related: Largest Oil Traders: Oil Prices Aren’t Going Anywhere
That, as Bloomberg reports,
is "because most panels are designed to supply power to the grid, not
directly to houses. During the heat of the day, solar systems generate
more juice than a home can handle. However, they don’t produce power at
all at night. So systems are tied into the grid, and the vast
majority aren’t working this week as PG&E cut power to much of
Northern California to prevent wildfires."
Of course, the
only way for most solar panels to work during a blackout is pairing
them with batteries, however as Tesla has found out the hard way, that
market is just starting to take off and even so it's having a very
difficult time making headway. The largest U.S. rooftop solar company,
Sunrun, said hundreds of its customers are making it through the
blackouts with batteries. Alas, the total number of those affected - and
without power - is in the hundreds of thousands.
"It’s the
perfect combination for getting through these shutdowns," Sunrun
Chairman Ed Fenster said in an interview. He expects battery sales to
boom in the wake of the outages.
For those wondering if their
appliances can work of the power generated by a Tesla, the answer is
no, at least without special equipment. Incidentally, without electricity,
a Tesla itself won't run. So those Californians who still have "uncool"
internal combustion engines are in luck; they just may have to pay
nearly $6 per gallon soon to fill up.
By Zerohedge.com
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