peak demand

Articles tagged “peak demand

2 articles found

The ''Set-and-Forget'' Grid: How Smart Thermostats Are Building Invisible Power Plants
Esg Assets

The ''Set-and-Forget'' Grid: How Smart Thermostats Are Building Invisible Power Plants

A new generation of smart thermostats, like those from Renew Home, is shifting from consumer gadgets to critical grid infrastructure. Utilities such as Arizona's Salt River Project are deploying them en masse, paying for installation and offering bill credits. In exchange, they gain the ability to subtly adjust temperatures during peak demand, creating aggregated 'Virtual Power Plants' that enhance grid stability. This article explores the hidden economic logic behind this trend, where customer comfort becomes a tradeable commodity for utilities seeking cost-effective demand management, and examines the long-term implications for energy markets and consumer relationships with power providers.

Beyond the Heatwave: The Hidden Economic and Infrastructure Stress Test for NYC and D.C.
Power Energy

Beyond the Heatwave: The Hidden Economic and Infrastructure Stress Test for NYC and D.C.

While headlines focus on record-breaking temperatures in New York City and Washington D.C., the forecasted surge in power demand reveals a deeper, systemic stress test. This article moves beyond weather reporting to analyze the hidden economic logic: how extreme heat acts as a real-time audit of aging grid infrastructure, exposes vulnerabilities in regional energy markets, and forces a reckoning with the escalating costs of climate adaptation. We examine the long-term implications for utility pricing, urban planning, and the resilience of critical supply chains that depend on stable power, arguing that each heatwave is less an anomaly and more a preview of a new, costly normal.