4th week
TRANSCRIPT
Hot and heavy energy usage:
How the demand and price for electricity skyrocketed on a 100°
inShareThe passage of Labor Day sadly marks the end of backyard BBQs and pool parties, but
for many people it may also come as a relief: a brutally hot summer is finally coming to an end.
The first half of the year was the hottest ever recorded in the contiguous US. July 2012 became
thehottest July on record. And in communities across the country, more than 27,000 daily high-
temperature records have been broken or tied so far this year.
Across the river from Opower headquarters, Washington DC faced 11 consecutive days that hit
or exceeded 95 degrees…it was the city’s most intense heat wave in 141 years of keeping
temperature records.
Thankfully, air conditioners keep us cool and comfortable during these sizzling summer days.
More than 60% of US households now have central air conditioning, up from 23% in the late
1970s. But the luxury of A/C comes at an obvious cost: higher electricity consumption. Exactly
how much higher? We found that the average home’s electricity usage on a 103°-high
summer day is up to 40% higher than during a typical summer day.
How do we know? We cracked open our data warehouse to examine anonymized energy usage
data across 18,000 homes from 3 different cities in the western part of US, which has faced
blistering temperatures this summer. In particular, we explored a few key questions about
energy consumption on hot days:
What exactly happens to electricity usage as the outdoor temperature rises?
When does home electricity usage reach a peak on hot days?
How does a dramatic increase in air-conditioning affect the power grid and the risk
of blackouts?
Our analysis shows that increased air-conditioning during the hottest days of summer 2012
caused residential electricity demand to shoot through the roof. And as we’ll see, when everyone
tried to keep cool on the hottest afternoons, it put severe pressure on the regional power grid —
in one case even causing the average wholesale price of electricity to double compared to a
typical summer day.
Let’s dig into the data and start piecing together some energy impacts of this summer’s record-
breaking temperatures…
Cranking up the A/C: home electricity consumption increases by 20-30% overall on the hottest
summer days
The relationship between temperature and residential electricity usage is extremely strong, as we
can see in the below graph. It displays average daily home electricity consumption on 45 summer
weekdays (each dot represents a day), plotted against the average local temperature for each of
those days.
The steady increase in home electricity usage as temperature goes up suggests that air
conditioners are the driving force of the upward trend. The graph indicates that the typical home
consumes 20-30% more electricity overall on the hottest days, relative to an average
summer day (e.g. the days in the middle of the graph).
And as we’ll see, most of the increase in electricity usage on hot days takes place at a very
specific time of day – a phenomenon that has major implications for the stability of the regional
electricity grid.
In the late afternoon of the hottest days, home electricity consumption increases to 40% above
average
A common pattern emerges in how home electricity usage fluctuates over the course of a hot
summer day.
In particular, the ―peak‖ (i.e. highest) demand in electricity usage comes somewhere between
3pm-7pm. That’s the time window when the day’s temperature is highest and also when many
people are returning home from work or school. The line graph below shows average hour-by-
hour home electricity usage during 4 different days in July and August. The temperature scale
indicates the maximum temperature for each day.
Charting this data makes two things clear: 1) the hotter the day, the higher the electricity usage
throughout the day, 2) on all these hot days, usage is highest between 3pm-7pm. Comparing a
103°-high day with an 83°-high day, we see that residential electricity demand during the
late afternoon was nearly 40% higher on the hotter day.
High A/C usage in the late afternoon means that 3-7pm on a hot day is effectively ―rush hour‖
for electricity consumption. But a big challenge looms during energy rush hour: how will power
plants supply enough electricity to accommodate the huge increase in electricity demand?
Increased electricity demand on super-hot days means that more power plants need to be turned
on, and that’s not cheap
To accommodate exceptionally high electricity usage on super-hot days, power companies
typically obtain electricity from a system of backup power plants, called ―peaker plants.‖ These
plants, which otherwise sit idle, can be flipped on quickly to satisfy ―peak‖ power demand (e.g.
everyone blasting their A/C on a 100 degree day between 3-7pm). However, electricity from
peaker plants is expensive.
That’s because peaker plants are often old and inefficient, using gas-turbine or steam-turbine
technologies that have low fuel efficiency. And as a result, flipping them on entails high
operational costs that can be six times higher than a comparable power plant. Peaker plants also
have a poor environmental reputation — they are considered to be more polluting than similar
power plants that operate throughout the year.
Just how expensive is it to operate peaker plants on the rare occasions when we need them? It’s
been estimated that 10-20% of the overall cost of providing electricity each year in the US comes
from just 100 hours of the year — largely corresponding to the highest-usage hours when air
conditioners are relentlessly gobbling up electricity.
For the above reasons, when a larger share of electricity generation is coming from peaker plants
on a particularly hot day, it becomes substantially more expensive for power companies to obtain
electricity. This trend is readily apparent in the below bar graph. Although the price that most
homes pay for their electricity stays constant, the wholesale price that their power company
must pay for obtaining electricity on a super-hot day is double that on a typical summer
day.
It’s clear that power companies pay a dear price for electricity from peaker plants. And
arguably, it’s a price worth paying: in ensuring that the supply of electricity keeps pace with
electricity demand, peaker plants serve as an important last line of defense from power outages.
It turns out, however, that firing up peaker plants is not the only possible approach to managing
peak electricity demand on hot days. Fortunately, there exists a cleaner and more cost-effective
approach: reducing the need for peaker plants in the first place.
The cheapest and greenest kilowatt-hour of electricity…is the one that is never produced
If each household could reduce their peak electricity demand even slightly on hot days (e.g. by
delaying laundry/dishwasher loads until after 7pm, or using window blinds to prevent
unnecessary work for the air conditioner), the aggregate benefits for the electricity grid and
households themselves could be enormous.
First and foremost, reducing peak demand relieves pressure on power plants, and so protects us
all from power outages. But slimming down peak demand is also in the direct best interest of
homes and businesses because it helps keep energy costs low: that’s because in the long term,
many power companies are likely to incorporate the high cost of infrequent peaker-plant
operations into customers’ everyday energy bills.
On a positive note, there are now often immediate cash benefits for customers who reduce their
home electricity demand at peak times. Many power companies have found that, instead of
using expensive peaker plants, it is cheaper and more environmentally friendly to encourage
customers — through incentives — to reduce peak demand in the first place. For example, a
number of utilities actively reward customers who agree to slightly turn down their air-
conditioner or electric water heater for a handful of short intervals on hot days.
As the summer of 2012 winds down, the number of days with extremely hot temperatures—and
the intense air-conditioner usage that follows—may yet crank up further. But if we can each
trim down our usage just a tad during the hottest hours of these days, we’ll all benefit—lower
energy bills, fewer outages, less pollution, and perhaps even extra cash payments from our power
company.
Check out these easy-to-do tips, as simple as setting your thermostat to 78°, to get ideas on how
to decrease your own peak electricity demand as the mercury rises.
Special thanks to David Moore, Ashley Sudney, and Yoni Ben-Meshulam.
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Methodology:
For the purposes of comparability, days considered for this analysis are confined to weekdays
between June 1-August 11, 2012 (excluding July 4) that were above 55° and did not have
precipitation. Results are based on averages across 18,000 anonymous households in 3 weather-
comparable western US cities. Prices reported for wholesale electricity are Locational Marginal
Prices in the day-ahead market for the 4-5pm interval, as reported by the California Independent
System Operator. Weather data is sourced from Anything Weather and Weather Underground.
The estimated sixfold difference in operational costs between peaker plants and an average
power plant is based on Monitoring Analytics (2012) and a related discussion in Alcott (2012).
The former reports that the variable operation & maintenance cost of a combustion turbine
peaker-plant facility is $7.59/MWh, which is approximately six times higher than the
$1.25/MWh variable operation & maintenance cost associated with a combined-cycle gas power
plant.
air-conditioning, energy costs, energy economics, grid stability, heat, load shifting, peak
demand,peaker, power plant, summer, temperature, usage, usage data, weather