sophiecentaur said:
That comment is a bit pessimistic.
It wasn't intended to be. I believe the fuel cost per kilowatt-hour to generate electrical power is much less than the continuing, and increasing, cost to build and maintain the infrastructure that supports electrical power transmission over long distances for an increasing demand, year after year. But the money the electric utility bills to its customers is based on how much energy (kilowatt-hours) the customer uses. That rate has to include fuel costs as well as all the other costs involved in getting a few thousand watts to your home and a few thousand megawatts to the rest of the customer base.
Amazing that it still works. Here in west-central Florida there are three-phase power lines everywhere. These were originally supported (at lower voltages) on wooden poles with glass or ceramic insulators, but because of hurricanes those wood poles are slowly being replaced with concrete poles, and a lot of the wires are going underground, too. A few years ago, FPL promised to move my power distribution underground "real soon now" but this has been stalled, probably by my neighbors saying "not in my back yard" for the placement of the ground-installed transformer.
I suffer a few days of FPL power loss, almost every year, because a hurricane has knocked down tree branches, that then has taken down power lines and sometimes wooden utility poles. My house, and a few others, are presently serviced by a 7kV "high line" that powers a single-phase "pole pig" transformer and some street lights in the neighborhood. The pole-mounted transformer distributes 120-0-120 vac power on three overhead wires to most of the houses, so those wires are subject to damage too.
My house, and two of my adjacent neighbors, have our power distribution buried underground from the pole pig to the house. The previous owners of our custom-built house started this, but the two previously vacant lots next door recently had houses built on them and their power is also underground. There are several houses still sipping their energy from overhead distribution, but I don't know how many. FPL has said they will pay to move those wires underground, but nothing has happened yet.
I have thirty-eight LG photovoltaic solar panels, with Enphase micro-inverters on each panel, and net-zero metering. After the panels were installed, I have not received a bill for energy delivered to my house. The panels (during the day) send energy back to the grid. This more than makes up for energy used at night when the sun don't shine, or it is too cloudy, foggy, rainy, or whatever. I pay about twenty-five bux a month to Florida Power & Light for the privilege of sending power back to their grid.
It's worked out fine (electrically) so far, but it's been a financial loser: I pay more in monthly principle and interest on the solar loan from Corning Credit Union than I used to pay FPL for their electricity. That could change in the future if the cost of electrical energy increases faster than the solar panels degrade with age. Plus, with inflation, I am paying with "cheaper" dollars every year. I don't see that changing any time soon. It's a retirement experiment, not an investment. And it has nothing to do with "saving the planet" which is doing fine also, last time I looked. And, yeah, I am an electrical engineer with no financial acumen, too.
The reason that three-phase alternating current prevailed over direct current back in Edison's day was because it had two strong poles in its tent: (1) three-phase rotating magnetic fields allowed simple induction motors of almost unlimited size to be built, sold, and used to jump-start American manufacturing and (2) alternating current is easily stepped up and down in voltage, as needed, using transformers which is essential for efficient distribution of electrical power with minimal losses.
Technology today allows huge amount of power to be transmitted over hundreds of miles with low energy loss using direct current at megavolt potentials. This can only occur when devices exist to synchronously rectify high-voltage alternating current at the transmission origin and then invert it back to alternating current for distribution at the load end.