Clean Energy 101: Virtual Power Plants
Homes and businesses can make the grid more reliable, and get paid to do so, by forming virtual power plants.
Climate-induced natural disasters are multiplying across the globe. From hurricanes and flash flooding, to droughts, heatwaves, and wildfire, more of the world is being touched by often devastating, costly damage than ever before. Yet even as these risks spread, solutions are multiplying that are providing more affordable, resilient options to help rebuild better when crisis hits, such as strengthening grid capacity, improving resiliency, and empowering the local workforce. RMI is rewriting the script on climate disaster response, from one marked by suffering and slow rebounds, to rebuilding with more equitable, affordable solutions. Explore RMI’s resilient solutions below.
Homes and businesses can make the grid more reliable, and get paid to do so, by forming virtual power plants.
More wind energy and interregional transmission could have mitigated the impacts of rolling blackouts experienced during Winter Storm Elliott.
Grid outages in extreme weather are a fossil fuel problem, not a renewable energy problem.
One of the key recommendations of this report is to ensure inclusive multi-stakeholder collaboration. This entails communicating clear market signals to suppliers and upstream equipment providers and coordinating closely among practitioners and installers.
The US electric grid is fragmented into independent grids and transmission planning regions, which poses a threat to reliability, especially during increasingly frequent extreme weather events.
Assessment of the potential emissions impact of R-410A refrigerant reclamation in the United States’ Residential HVAC Sector.
We must build to weather the storm and fight climate change too. By integrating resilience and decarbonization, we can create safe and more sustainable spaces for the future.
Texans recently endured another bout of record low temperatures and icy conditions. While it didn’t compare to the devastating effects of winter storm Uri in 2021, it was a grim reminder of last year’s historic freeze.
A range of solutions, from market-based conservation measures to grid hardware upgrades, could prepare the electricity system for future extremes.
All Americans should have equitable access to tools and financing to future-proof their homes against extreme weather and rising energy costs.
Without resilience planning, climate change threatens the pace of the energy transition, in addition to affecting overall energy security and the social benefits that clean energy affords.
How two women from Trinidad and Tobago are championing collaborative approaches to accelerate the Caribbean clean energy transition.
Communities can leverage new federal funding to increase resilience in the face of increasing climate-induced disasters.
One RMIer recounts his experience braving Hurricane Ian and why the lights stayed on in his solar-powered sustainable community.
In the face of worsening extreme weather, cities are creating resilience hubs to provide communities with numerous health, economic, and environmental benefits.
After multiple destructive hurricanes, The Bahamas has become a model on how islands can become more resilient and reduce generation costs.
The Puerto Rico Community Energy Resilience Initiative shows that a community-driven process combined with flexible capital and technical assistance is the most effective way to serve the underserved.
Over the past few years, Texans have come to understand the need for resilience in the face of a changing climate.
AccuWeather
Project Syndicate
Climate Money Watchdog
Project-Syndicate
SmartCitiesDive
New York Times
The Economic Times