In Short : California is experiencing a rise in solar and wind power curtailments, indicating challenges in managing the state’s renewable energy supply. Curtailments occur when excess electricity is generated, but the grid cannot accommodate it. Factors like transmission constraints and mismatch between supply and demand patterns contribute to curtailments. Addressing these challenges is crucial for maximizing the potential of renewable energy sources and ensuring a stable, reliable, and sustainable energy grid in California.
In Detail : The California Independent System Operator (CAISO), the grid operator for most of the state, is increasingly curtailing solar- and wind-powered electricity generation as it balances supply and demand during the rapid growth of wind and solar power in California.
Grid operators must balance supply and demand to maintain a stable electric system. The output of wind and solar generators are reduced either through price signals or rarely, through an order to reduce output, during periods of:
- Congestion, when power lines don’t have enough capacity to deliver available energy
- Oversupply, when generation exceeds customer electricity demand
In CAISO, curtailment is largely a result of congestion. Congestion-related curtailments have increased significantly since 2019 because solar generation has been outpacing upgrades in transmission capacity.
In 2022, CAISO curtailed 2.4 million megawatt hours (MWh) of utility-scale wind and solar output, a 63 per cent increase from the amount of electricity curtailed in 2021. As of September, CAISO has curtailed more than 2.3 million MWh of wind and solar output so far this year.
Solar accounts for almost all of the energy curtailed in CAISO—95 per cent in 2022 and 94 per cent in the first seven months of 2023. CAISO tends to curtail the most solar in the spring when electricity demand is relatively low (because moderate spring temperatures mean less demand for space heating or air conditioning) and solar output is relatively high.
CAISO has increasingly curtailed renewable generation as renewable capacity has grown in California. In 2014, a combined 9.0 gigawatts (GW) of wind and solar capacity had been built in California. As of July 2023, that number had grown to 17.6 GW. Developers plan to add another 3.0 GW by the end of 2024.
CAISO is exploring and implementing various solutions to its increasing curtailment of renewables, including:
The Western Energy Imbalance Market (WEIM) is a real-time market that allows participants outside of CAISO to buy and sell energy to balance demand and supply. In 2022, more than 10 per cent of total possible curtailments were avoided by trading within the WEIM. A day ahead market is expected to be operational in Spring 2025.
CAISO is expanding transmission capacity to reduce congestion. CAISO’s 2022–23 Transmission Planning Process includes 45 transmission projects to accommodate load growth and a larger share of generation from renewable energy sources.
CAISO is promoting the development of flexible resources that can quickly respond to sudden increases and decreases in demand such as battery storage technologies. California has 4.9 GW of battery storage, and developers plan to add another 7.6 GW by the end of 2024, according to our survey of recent and planned capacity changes. Renewable generators can charge these batteries with electricity that would otherwise have been curtailed.