cpscdave said:
I read somewhere after the last Earth hour someone arguing that having lots of people shut off their appliances for an hour actually results in a next increase in the amount of green house gas emitted.
Sorry cpscdave, that is completely wrong in most circumstances. An exception could be turning off the air conditioner for an hour. It will just run double in the next hour if you turn it back on. However, if you leave it off for 4 or 8 hours the energy savings will be big. That's basically what jaus tail said.
jaus tail said:
Don't generators and motors work at maximum efficiency when they are working at full load?
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Sorry jaus tail, that's also off target. The efficiency of the generators and motors are small stuff. The big effect is the efficiency of the whole power plant. Think boilers, turbines, pumps, jet engines and the like.
Some plants are designed to run at 100% capacity all the time. We call those base load plants, and they tend to be the most efficient plants. Some are called peaking plants and their designs are optimized to turn off and on on short notice to meet demand. Still others, like diesel generators, run only in emergencies. Most power plants lie somewhere between those extremes.
Grid operators in deregulated regions not only pay power plants to provide energy, they also pay separately for some of the plants to participate in up/down regulation, and they pay a third category of power plants to stand by in reserve not making power just in case they are needed. All these payments, are adjusted continuously to minimize the total cost to consumers.
It may sound complicated but it makes good sense. Why shouldn't we have diverse kinds of power plants, with each kind optimized to best serve a particular need? Working together, they provide the least cost solution.
Compare it to automobiles. We have cars, pickups, SUVs, big trucks, vans, buses, scooters, and many other kinds. All together they serve the nation's transportation system.