| ▲ | fulafel 2 hours ago | |
> my state will need at least 5GW of power to literally keep the lights on. I think this abstraction is missing the elasticity of demand that can by unlocked by end-to-end dynamic pricing. Probably if the production was cut in half for some day, and hourly price hiked up until demand matches production, customers would still choose to keep most of the lighting while postponing some more energy intensive loads. | ||