California
California’s grid faces collapse as leaders push renewables, electric vehicles, experts say
California’s electrical grid faces years of potential blackouts and failure as state leaders proceed pushing aggressive measures to transition to renewable vitality sources, coverage consultants inform Fox Information Digital.
The state’s grid, which remains to be primarily powered by fossil fuels, is present process a significant shift from pure gasoline and coal energy to renewable energy like wind and photo voltaic. Concurrently, state officers are pushing an electrification of the economic system, significantly within the transportation sector via electrical car mandates, which is predicted to extend strain on the grid.
“California is drastically reducing our dependence on fossil fuels and cleansing our air,” Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom stated in a November announcement unveiling the “world’s first detailed pathway to carbon neutrality.”
The state’s plan includes targets to slash greenhouse gasoline emissions by 85%, lower oil utilization by 94% and deploy extra photo voltaic and wind capability over the subsequent twenty years. The aggressive plan to overtake the state’s vitality system got here three months after a prime California environmental company moved ahead with a rule requiring all new car gross sales to be electrical by 2035.
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In 2021, the newest yr with information, wind and photo voltaic accounted for about 25% of whole electrical energy generated in California whereas pure gasoline accounted for greater than 50% of in-state electrical energy technology. And 19% of latest automotive gross sales in California have been zero-emission automobiles, state information confirmed.
Consultants instructed Fox Information Digital environmental mandates carried out by Newsom and his administration have already created instability within the grid, a problem they argued would solely worsen as current fossil gas energy technology capability was taken offline and changed by intermittent sources.
“They will need to construct an outrageous quantity of wind and photo voltaic in a really brief time in the event that they wish to accomplish their targets of electrifying — our complete transportation sector and our complete residence heating and cooling and residential sector,” Edward Ring, a senior fellow with and co-founder of the California Coverage Heart, instructed Fox Information Digital in an interview.
“There is a burden to the patron that is going to get very heavy,” he continued. “Even when they’ll pull it off with out blackouts, the burden to the patron goes to be ridiculous.”
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Over summer time, the California Impartial System Operator (CAISO), the state’s electrical grid operator, repeatedly warned that top demand would considerably pressure utility suppliers’ capability to produce shoppers electrical energy amid a warmth wave.
CAISO issued an “vitality emergency alert 3,” its highest alert stage, at one level in early September, saying residents ought to maximize conservation and anticipate rotating outages, and a flex alert for greater than seven consecutive days. The operator additionally beneficial residents chorus from charging electrical automobiles to scale back stress on the grid.
“They already are struggling,” stated Myron Ebell, the director of the Aggressive Enterprise Institute’s Heart for Vitality and Surroundings.
“They’re, in actual fact, telling those that they will begin shutting off pure gasoline to homes and that they need to convert to electrical energy,” he instructed Fox Information Digital. “Then, they’re forcing individuals to purchase electrical automobiles and they will cease promoting inner combustion engine automobiles. That may add to the grid’s demand.”
In its annual report launched in December, the North American Electrical Reliability Company (NERC), a nonpartisan grid watchdog, said that California confronted a “excessive threat of vitality or capability shortfall” in coming years, significantly throughout summer time months, because of conventional energy plant retirements and elevated demand.
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Ebell added that the intermittent nature of photo voltaic and wind, that means they produce much less energy relative to their whole technology capability, might create instability. Inexperienced vitality builders and authorities officers usually spotlight whole capability of latest renewable energy tasks, however fail to say how a lot precise energy the undertaking is predicted to provide.
Photo voltaic panels, for instance, produce simply 25% and wind generators produce 34% of their listed capability, in keeping with the Vitality Data Administration (EIA). Coal, pure gasoline and nuclear energy crops, in the meantime produce 49%, 54% and 93% of their listed capability, respectively.
“The one approach the electrification of the transportation sector and of residence heating and cooling can work is that if the utility sector continues to construct pure gasoline fired crops and appears to constructing nuclear crops and maybe constructing new coal crops as a result of the grid in these states which might be pushing these insurance policies is already overloaded,” Ebell continued.
“As everyone strikes to EVs, if it occurs, the one solution to do it’s to seek out extra baseload energy and dispatchable energy.”
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The overall capability of the state’s pure gasoline energy crops has fallen 15% between 2013 and 2021, in keeping with the California Vitality Fee. In April, Newsom was compelled to reverse course on plans to permit California’s solely remaining nuclear plant, which alone produces 9% of the state’s electrical energy technology, to shut.
California additionally imports extra electrical energy than another state within the U.S., receiving between 20%-30% of its provides from primarily fossil fuels out-of-state, EIA information reveals.
One other potential hurdle to the way forward for California’s grid stability is the necessity for brand spanking new transmission line infrastructure to deal with further demand and join new renewable vitality tasks, usually situated in rural areas, to the grid, Steven Malanga, a senior fellow on the Manhattan Institute, instructed Fox Information Digital. He additionally argued leaders ought to put larger emphasis on battery storage which stays far behind the place it must be.
“These are large prices which have not been pretty calculated by the renewable vitality individuals,” Malanga stated in an interview. “Primarily what occurs is we have now this energy grid that has been constructed up over the a long time and to go renewable would not simply contain constructing renewable like wind farms and photo voltaic farms, however you additionally need to construct new transmission traces.”
“And extra considerably, you need to construct storage capability,” he continued. “In a number of locations like California, they don’t seem to be even backing up renewables with pure gasoline, which is absolutely what top individuals, utility individuals, say you need to do as a result of renewables are intermittent.”
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The Division of Vitality estimated final yr that the U.S. would wish to develop its transmission infrastructure 60% by 2030 and triple its measurement by 2050 to satisfy local weather targets.
In response to an unbiased evaluation by vitality researcher Robert Bryce, at its present tempo, it might take an estimated 282 years to triple the nation’s transmission capability. Like different vitality tasks and infrastructure improvement, transmission traces usually face delays from environmental regulation and native opposition.
“It’s a must to get that energy to cities that are the large customers of electrical energy,” Malanga instructed Fox Information Digital. “So, you need to construct all new transmission traces. Transmission traces will not be solely costly to construct, however they face large environmental rules. Allowing them takes years.”
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“It takes ten years simply to get approvals to construct a few of these transmission traces and that is only one technology,” he added. “A few of these locations have renewable targets which might be 2035, 2040 and 2045. That is not that is far sooner or later in the event you’re speaking about constructing an entire new vitality infrastructure, which is actually what we’re speaking about in California.”
“The reality of the matter is that in lots of locations we have seen how the vitality grid is already dangerously near failing as a result of we’re not paying sufficient consideration to sustaining the grid. That is going to end in blackouts. And we have already seen them. The tales are tragic.”
California
Another batch of raw milk from a trendy California brand just tested positive for bird flu
- Two batches of raw milk from a trendy California brand have tested positive for bird flu this week.
- Bird flu has been spreading rapidly among cattle in the US.
- Experts say drinking raw milk is dangerous, and can cause food poisoning.
Another batch of raw milk just tested positive for bird flu in California.
Last Sunday, Fresno-based Raw Farm voluntarily recalled a first batch of cream top whole raw milk with a “best by” date of November 27. By Wednesday, the California Department of Public Health announced that a second batch of Raw Farm cream top, with a “best by” date of December 7 had also tested positive for bird flu, based on retail sampling.
“We’re not making a big deal about it, because it’s not a big deal,” Kaleigh Stanziani, Raw Farm’s vice president of marketing, said in a short video posted on YouTube after the farm’s first voluntary recall was announced earlier this week.
She said there had only been an indication that there might be a “trace element of something possible,” emphasizing that there had been no reported illnesses of Raw Farms cows or positive tests from the cattle.
Raw Farm owner Mark McAfee later told the LA Times that the California Department of Food and Agriculture had requested that his company “hold delivery of further products” until Friday, after conducting thorough testing of two Raw Farms and one creamery on Wednesday. (McAfee could not immediately be reached for comment by Business Insider during the Thanksgiving holiday.)
Raw milk may be helping bird flu spread — but not in the way you might think
Scientists suspect that cross-contamination of raw milk between animals may be one reason the H5N1 virus is spreading rapidly among cows in the US — and could even contribute to the human spread of the virus. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cautions that dairy workers might be able to contract bird flu by infected raw milk splashed into their eyes.
There is no definitive evidence yet that humans can get bird flu from drinking contaminated raw milk. Instead, health authorities generally recommend avoiding raw milk because of other serious health risks, including food poisoning with bacteria like Salmonella, E.coli, or Listeria.
There are no known health benefits of drinking raw milk. Instead, all evidence suggests that pasteurized milk is just as nutritious, and is safer to consume.
Still, raw milk has become a trendy product among some influencers. Gwenyth Paltrow says she has it in her coffee in the morning.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Trump’s pick for Health and Human Services secretary, says he wants the US Food and Drug Administration to stop its “war” against raw milk.
Over the summer, “Carnivore MD” Paul Saladino released a raw milk smoothie in partnership with the elite Los Angeles health foods store Erewhon featuring unpasteurized (raw) kefir from Raw Farms, and powdered beef organs.
California has some of the loosest rules around raw milk in the country; it’s generally fine for California retailers like health foods stores and grocers to sell it, raw milk products just can’t be transported across state lines, per FDA rules.
Michael Payne, a researcher at the Western Institute of Food Safety and Security, told The Guardian that people consuming Dr. Paul’s $19 smoothie were “playing Russian roulette with their health,” and ignoring pasteurization, “the single most important food safety firewall in history.”
California dairy farms have been seeing an uptick in bird flu cases since August. The state has reported 29 confirmed human cases of bird flu, and all but one of those was sourced back to cows.
Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the first confirmed case of bird flu in a California child from Alameda County. The child had no known contact with infected farm animals, but may have been exposed to wild birds, the California health department said in a statement.
The child had mild symptoms and is recovering well after receiving antiviral drugs.
California
10 of 15 Southern California industries slow their hiring pace
Southern California’s bosses added 80,700 workers in the past year to a record 8.06 million jobs – but that hiring pace is roughly half of the pre-pandemic job market’s gains.
My trusty spreadsheet – filled with state job figures for Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties – compared employment changes for the region and 15 industries in the year ended in October with the average yearly hiring pace before coronavirus upended the economy.
Yes, there have never been more Southern Californians employed. However, the recent hirings that created the all-time high staffing are far below the average job creation of 159,600 a year in 2015-19.
This is one of many signals of cooler business trends. It’s a chill significantly tied to the Federal Reserve’s attempts to slow what was once an overheated economy.
But Southern California bosses have another challenge – a shortage of workers. The region’s workforce, a measure of labor supply, is basically flat comparing 2024 to 2015-19. Fewer choices of workers have added difficulty for local businesses trying to meet their staffing needs.
Think of that when you learn that among the 15 Southern California business sectors tracked – hiring in 10 industries is below pre-pandemic years compared with five industries with improvements.
The downs
First, contemplate the 10 industries where the hiring pace has weakened, ranked by the size of the decline …
Professional-business services: 1.14 million workers in October – down 4,600 in a year vs. 24,100 annual gains in 2015-19. This net downturn of 28,700 jobs is unnerving because this white-collar work typically pays above-average salaries.
Construction: 378,700 workers – down 3,100 in a year vs. 16,200 annual gains in 2015-19. A building slowdown due to lofty mortgage rates created this 19,300 reversal.
Logistics-utilities: 820,800 workers – up 6,800 in a year vs. 25,800 annual gains in 2015-19. What’s at least a temporary oversupply of warehouses in the region may be behind this 19,000 slowdown.
Manufacturing: 558,400 workers – down 15,300 in a year vs. 4,100 annual cuts in 2015-19. This 11,200 drop is continued losses of local factory work tied to high cost of doing business in the region.
Fast-food restaurants: 359,400 workers – up 3,400 in a year vs. 12,400 annual gains in 2015-19. Weaker consumer spending and a hike in the industry’s minimum wage contribute to this 9,000 drop.
Hotels/entertainment/recreation: 268,300 workers – up 3,400 in a year vs. 9,600 annual gains in 2015-19. This 6,200 cooling reflects worker shortages.
Full-service eateries/food service: 339,100 workers – up 1,600 in a year vs. 6,600 annual gains in 2015-19. Inflation making shoppers pickier is part of this 5,000 cooling.
Information: 214,200 workers – down 100 in a year vs. 3,700 annual gains in 2015-19. Weakness in tech businesses and Hollywood productions created the 3,800 net downturn.
Personal services: 266,600 workers – up 500 in a year vs. 3,200 annual gains in 2015-19. Again, it is hard to find people to do this work. Thus, a 2,700 cooling.
Government: 1.03 million workers – up 11,600 in a year vs. 12,500 annual gains in 2015-19. This 900 dip is status quo.
The ups
Ponder the five industries where the hiring pace rose in the past year, ranked by the size of the gains …
Social assistance: 512,300 workers – up 28,200 in a year vs. 18,300 annual gains in 2015-19. The 9,900 addition comes as more folks need help at home for healthcare and child care.
Healthcare: 836,700 workers – up 30,100 in a year vs. 20,900 annual gains in 2015-19. The 9,200 growth parallels the region’s aging population and its need for medical services.
Retailing: 748,300 workers – up 8,300 in a year vs. 300 annual cuts in 2015-19. This somewhat surprising 8,600 improvement may be consumers tiring of online commerce and wanting to get out to shop.
Financial: 364,100 workers – up 4,400 in a year vs. 3,900 annual gains in 2015-19. The minor 500 improvement is a return to normalcy. Super-heated hiring came in the pandemic days thanks to a brief drop in mortgage rates to historic lows.
Private education: 215,700 workers – up 5,500 in a year vs. 5,100 annual gains in 2015-19. This 400 uptick reflects the growing interest in alternatives to public schooling.
Bottom line
While it’s rare for all industries to be growing at the same time – minus, say, just after an economic downturn – this 2024 edition of the winners vs. losers list raises an important issue.
It appears much of the past year’s job creation is coming from industries that historically pay meager wages. That’s an especially worrisome trend in high-cost Southern California.
Jonathan Lansner is the business columnist for the Southern California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com
California
California Lottery Powerball, Daily 3 Midday winning numbers for Nov. 27, 2024
The California Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Nov. 27, 2024, results for each game:
Powerball
01-06-07-13-40, Powerball: 05, Power Play: 5
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Daily 3
Midday: 7-1-0
Evening: 4-9-6
Check Daily 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Daily Derby
1st:11 Money Bags-2nd:3 Hot Shot-3rd:8 Gorgeous George, Race Time: 1:47.44
Check Daily Derby payouts and previous drawings here.
Fantasy 5
03-10-12-29-33
Check Fantasy 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Daily 4
6-1-3-2
Check Daily 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
SuperLotto Plus
03-05-15-16-42, Mega Ball: 24
Check SuperLotto Plus payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Desert Sun producer. You can send feedback using this form.
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