1 #+date: <2023-12-28 Thu 21:52>
2 #+filetags: :analysis:visualisation:energy_transition:
3 #+title: How the energy transition is replacing daytime electricity generation.
6 In a process labelled the energy transition, traditional sources for
7 electricity generation are being replaced by renewable energy sources
8 like wind and solar. To the extent this happens 'behind the meter',
9 i.e. where the user of the electricity is generating & consuming it on
10 their own premises like with rooftop solar panels, it results in the
11 metered demand on the electricity grid not being aware of the demand
12 that is met by on-site generation. Given how prevalent solar panels
13 have become on Western Australian roofs over the past 10 years, it
14 might not come as a surprise this has resulted in the remaining demand
15 on the grid to come down on very sunny days around noon. This
16 reduction has been quite rapid for a couple of years, but seems to
17 have slowed this year and last, as seen in the graph below.
19 #+attr_html: :class img-fluid :alt Evolution of minimum demand on the Western Australian SWIS
20 [[file:../assets/SWIS_minimum_demand_evolution.png]]
25 To create the graph, I calculate the 14-day running minimum of the daytime
26 demand on the grid, starting back in 2014. For each year, the minimum that was reached is
27 shown, as is the year-on-year difference between them. Since 2016,
28 these minima have always been achieved during the Australian springtime. The 2015
29 minimum jumps out, as it happened during summer and it took another 2.5 years to equal it again - I imagine it is linked to an outage of an
30 industrial consumer of electricity.