From Deseret News archives:
Hawaiian breezes unreliable for power
But that isn't anywhere close to happening. For one thing, the technology isn't quite ready.
The big drawback with wind and solar energy, for example, is that the flow of electricity stops when the breeze dies down and the sun sets. Since there is no good way to store the power for use later, homeowners need conventional electrical service meaning fossil fuel-burning plants as a backup.
"Our community understands the time is now to think about these things, and yet we demand that they keep the lights on," said Mike Gresham, vice president for UPC Hawaii Wind Partners, which runs the state's largest wind farm, consisting of 20 turbines on Maui.
And so, despite rising prices, oil and coal are still the most reliable and convenient energy sources in Hawaii.
In fact, Hawaii relies on imported fossil fuels more than any other state, with about 90 percent of its energy coming from foreign countries and most of the rest coming from renewable resources in 2005, according to state data.
The major reason Hawaii is so dependent on foreign oil is that it is way out in the middle of the Pacific, far from the pipelines, electrical trans- mission lines and coastal oil fields on the U.S. mainland. Fuel can be easily delivered aboard Asian tankers instead.
With world demand for electricity climbing ever higher, Hawaii passed a law last year that calls for one-fifth of the state's energy to come from renewable sources by 2020.
Things are clearly moving in that direction. Among the renewable-energy projects under way is a $200 million Maui wind farm that will power 15,000 homes starting in 2008.
But solar and wind power still account for a small percentage of the energy consumed in Hawaii.
The problem with solar power is that the sun sets just when electricity customers need electricity the most, between 5 p.m. and 9 p.m. So far, solar power has not proven feasible for producing electricity in Hawaii, but an estimated 80,000 homes and other facilities are served by solar water heaters.
As for wind, "you need a storage method that can come in and back that up" whenever the breeze dies down, said Karl Stahlkopf, president of Renewable Hawaii, a subsidiary of Hawaiian Electric Co.
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