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The Download: Politics, Ideas, and Civic Life in Massachusetts
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CommonWealth Beacon Download. Politics, Ideas, & Civic Life in Massachusetts.

New from CommonWealth Beacon

SPORTS BETTING POLL: A CommonWealth Beacon/GBH News poll indicates young people, particularly men, aren’t betting as much on sports as feared, but there are some troubling signs. Jennifer Smith has all the details.


MBTA BIG WINNER IN HOUSE BUDGET: House leaders are planning a major boost in spending on the MBTA in their FY25 budget, but they underfunded the T’s plan to offer a half-off fare to low-income customers. Bruce Mohl reports the T says it needs somewhere between $26 and $29.7 million for the first year of the low-income fare, but the House plan provides only $20 million.


OPINION: The Humane Society’s Preyel Patel says the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus is showing Massachusetts that wild animals aren’t needed for a successful circus. Now, she says, it’s time for lawmakers to make the change permanent.

Magical eclipse created temporary solar power void


April 9, 2024

By BRUCE MOHL

The sun and the moon put on a magical light show on Monday afternoon across New England, and the folks who run the regional power grid performed a little magic themselves, offsetting the temporary eclipse of most solar power in the region with more electricity from natural gas generating plants and imports.


Officials at ISO New England estimate roughly 4,000 megawatts of electricity, or about a third of total electricity demand at the time, was being generated by solar just prior to the eclipse. As the sun disappeared, the solar power went with it, leaving a gaping hole that needed to be filled quickly.


The hole was filled by calling on natural gas power plants to step up production and by importing electricity from neighboring regions. The real-time data on the grid operator’s website showed that natural gas-generated electricity went from 34 percent of the region’s needs just prior to the eclipse to a high of 47 percent at the peak of the eclipse. Net imports of electricity went from zero to 6 percent. Renewables, meanwhile, went from providing 18 percent of the region’s electricity pre-eclipse to as low as 8 percent at the peak of the eclipse.


Such drastic swings in electricity production often happen because a power plant or a group of power plants suddenly go offline because of some sort of failure. In those instances, the grid operator has to make up the difference on the fly, with many generating plants requiring significant time to get up and running. With the eclipse, the challenge was far more manageable because the timing of when the moon would move between the earth and the sun was known precisely.

The Codcast

This week on the Codcast, a live recording of an MBTA Communities law panel, moderated by CommonWealth Beacon's Gin Dumcius. The panelists are Andrea Harris-Long of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council, State Rep. Russell Holmes, and Quincy City Council President Ian Cain.

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Grid operators prepared for the eclipse in advance and executed their power-replacement strategy without a hitch on Monday.


The eclipse’s effect on solar generation was just another reminder of how solar power is changing the way the power grid operates. It used to be that demand for electricity from the grid grew during the afternoon and early evening and then tapered off overnight as people went to sleep. But solar power is changing that dynamic. Because of the rise of solar power, increasingly more power is needed from the grid at night than during the day.


On Monday just prior to the eclipse, ISO New England estimates roughly 4,000 megawatts of solar power was being generated – 3,400 megawatts behind the meter and 650 megawatts from grid-connected solar resources. The behind-the-meter generation is called that because it is used on site and not delivered to the home or business by the local utility, which in turn obtains the power from transmission lines connecting to power plants across the region.


As this behind-the-meter solar generation increases, demand for electricity from the power plants that make up the grid falls – at least until the sun goes down and demand for power from the grid spikes upward.


ISO New England said the first time demand for power from the grid was higher at night than during the day was on April 21, 2018. It happened 33 more times through the end of 2021, and then the shift began to accelerate as more and more homes and businesses embraced solar. It happened 45 times in 2022 and 73 times in 2023 – a fifth of the year – and shows no sign of slowing down.


The shift in demand for power from the grid occurs most frequently in the spring (March, April, and May are the top months) but also in November, January, and December. The only time of the year it doesn’t happen is the heart of the summer, when air conditioning in the afternoon and early evening typically pushes electricity usage higher.

More from CommonWealth Beacon

POLITICAL TENSION: A CommonWealth Beacon/GBH News poll indicates 64 percent of Massachusetts residents believe violence is likely with the presidential election and 72 percent say the situation is very bad or constitutes a crisis. GBH’s Adam Reilly has more.


OPINION: Adam Terry of Cantrip says Massachusetts should follow the lead of Minnesota and fully legalize beverages containing THC from hemp.


OPINION: Alisa Magnotta of Housing Assistance says housing legislation pending on Beacon Hill could save Cape Cod.

In Other News

BEACON HILL

  • State Treasurer Deborah Goldberg said the two-day administrative hearing this Wednesday and Thursday to consider the future of suspended Cannabis Control Commission chair Shannon O’Brien will be closed to the public. (Boston Globe

MUNICIPAL MATTERS  

  • Boston City Councilor Erin Murphy calls for a city hiring freeze amid uncertainty about property tax revenue. (Boston Herald)

  • Springfield Mayor Domenic Sarno appointed Stephen Buoniconti, a former legislator and candidate for DA, as the city’s solicitor. (Western Mass Politics & Insight

HEALTH/HEALTH CARE

BUSINESS/ECONOMY

  • OneUnited, the largest Black-owned bank in the US, is moving its headquarters to Roxbury next year from downtown Boston. (Boston Business Journal)

EDUCATION

  • A special education teacher files a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against the Amherst-Pelham Regional Schools, alleging discriminatory treatment because she advocated for disadvantaged students. (Daily Hampshire Gazette)

  • The Brockton Public Schools superintendent discusses the surge in violent incidents after in-person classes resumed. (The Enterprise)

TRANSPORTATION

  • South Coast Rail test trains will begin running this spring, with a start date for riders still to be decided. (Standard-Times)

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/COURTS

  • Essex County Sheriff Kevin Coppinger is trading barbs with federal immigration officials over the release of a migrant accused of raping a child. (Salem News)

  • More than 200 women and some men allege in a lawsuit that a former rheumatologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital started sexually abusing patients in 2010. (Associated Press

  • A Hanover High school teacher is charged with threatening to bring a rifle to school after the principal disciplined him. (Patriot Ledger)

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