Be aware that the CO2e emissions shown in this app give an indication but have pretty big caveats:
The CO2 emissions of nuclear that are shown are most likely too low. Electicity Maps just used the absolute lowest of a number of estimates.
The emissions of reservoir-based hydro vary depending on climate and biomass in the reservoir but Electricity Maps uses a single standard value. Some hydro power in warmer climates is connected to methane emissions from the reservoir, because of anaerobic processes at the bottom of the reservoir. Some reservoirs emit as CO2e as a coal plant with a similar capacity. [edited slightly, see below↓]
They are showing solar/wind emitting emissions when they're producing electricity. However, solar and wind don't work that way because they're not using consumables. Their emissions mainly come from manufacturing and transport. In essence, solar and wind are emitting just as much whether they are producing electricity or not.
Thank you for the hydro part, didn't know that yet. It does not seem as bad as you said tough, This paper states up to 73g CO₂eq/kWh which is far below the 400-800 of a stone coal plant.
True. Everything that happens outside of the grid is not counted. That means a lot of rooftop PV generation is not counted but it also means that big companies with private fossil gas plants are not counted either.
Welcome to our government and their pockets lined with coal money. Not the most ecological government going around. We got a new one recently so hopefully they do atleast a bit more than thr last ones.
Think they have still approved 3 more coal mines, so probably have their pockets lined as well.
Electricity generation from wind and solar is not constant. PeakPick visualizes and forecasts the share of renewables.
By choosing when to run your home appliances, you can use more of the renewable capacity, and less of fossil fuel backups
This made me aware that the best time to use electricity is around noon (+/- a few hours). By shifting your electricity consumption to this time, you can cause less emissions, regardless of your contract.
Open question: A complete picture would require plotting the consumption along the production. For example, while renewables might peak at 1 PM, maybe all that capacity is already eaten up by consumption at that time. If hypothetically consumption was below capacity at 3 PM, it might be better to consume then, even if capacity is lower then.
Shouldn't there be some normalization based on population? Like some of the low population states / siberia have bad emissions but that should have much less effect than a smaller difference in a more populated location.
It's an electricity map, not am emissions map. Otherwise you would have to also factor in the industrialization of the country and its imports & exports.
Kind of surprised South Carolina is so bad. Just drove by so many solar farms you'd think the state ran it alone. Apparently my random sample was incredibly biased. Also they're fairly recent installations, so maybe it hasn't filtered into the data.