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After a massive heat wave in California that led grid operator CAISO to order its first rolling blackouts since the 2001 energy crisis on Friday and Saturday, the state has thus far managed to avoid further forced outages. Several out-of-state powergrids also reported emergency conditions on Monday and Tuesday.
California’s two days of rolling blackouts in August were the result of disconnects between its existing grid reliability constructs and the needs of an increasingly solar-poweredgrid, and its failure to prepare for a Western U.S.-wide wide heatwave that undermined its reliance on out-of-state resources.
California’s distributed energy resources add up to gigawatts' worth of capacity that could be used to prevent future rolling blackouts and balance the state’s increasingly clean-poweredgrid — if the state can compensate them for those services.
In this vision, GRID Alternatives , a non-profit solar installer, was formed in 2004. Looking at real-world economic challenges to solar power, GRID Alternatives takes a broader approach to solar that has helped set the stage for large-scale solar adoption worldwide.
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