High-Temp Superconductors To Connect Power Grids
physburn writes "Somewhere in a triangle between Roswell (UFO) NM, Albuquerque (Left Turn) NM, and Amarillo (Do you know the way?) TX, a 22.5 square mile triangle of High Temperature Superconductor pipeline is to be built. Each leg of the triangle can carry 5GW of electricity. The purpose to load-balance and sell electricity between America's three power grids. Previously the Eastern Grid, Western Grid and Texan Grid have been separate, preventing cheap electricity being sold from one end of America to the other. The Tres Amiga Superstation, as it is to be called, will finally connect the three grids. The superstation is also designed to link renewable solar and wind power in the grids, and is to use HTS wire from American Superconductor. Some 23 years after its invention, today HTS comes of age. "
That's enough to power slightly more than four time machines.
This is why I come to slashdot! A technical article with the right units! 5 GW of electricity. Not 100,000 volts of electricity, not 50,000 Amps of electricity, but 5 GW. Now, that's useful!
It's a great thing, but the cynical part (85.6%) of me wonders if this means we'll now be able to have national blackouts rather than just regional ones.
I can only hope this could begin to revitalize that area of the country. While I'm not a native, I drove through there a while back and it was terribly, terribly depressing. Run-down houses and empty shops in lots of towns, not a pretty sight.
Any native New Mexicans who can give us the low-down?
-
Maybe one day my electric bill will go down and I can leave all of my computers running... By then SRP will have raised the rates anyway.
Don't you mean San Jose?
That's why the OP just said it was to be built "somewhere" and didn't mention Clovis.
Oops.
Lucky Day: Wherever there is injustice, you will find us.
Ned Nederlander: Wherever there is suffering, we'll be there.
Dusty Bottoms: Wherever liberty is threatened, you will find...
Lucky Day, Ned Nederlander, Dusty Bottoms: The Three Amigos!
Sure Amiga still rocks !
Who will build an Atari ST grid ?
The world belongs to those who get up early. - I'm far from being the king of Earth then
Seriously, Roswell?
More likely this is going to be the supragrid where the huge alien craft will come to suck our energy away. (Think "V" The mini-series)
Let me get this straight: it will be a square, triangle, pipeline? Are you sure it's not a series of tubes?
'Cause it's not enough to black out just the northeast during a cascade failure; we have to black out all of conus at the same time.
You're not safe just because your state is an energy exporter. Just like a sudden spike in demand, a sudden huge drop in demand forces generating plants into emergency-safe mode, shutting them down. You're safe only if your part of the grid neither imports nor exports more than a small percentage of the total power in play.
Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
I wonder if there is a difference in the potential of this technology and other high throughput power transferring systems. I think being able to distribute power has the capacity to put us on the road to using more electricity as opposed to oil based fuel. That's all we've needed: a kick in the joules to get us on a better path.
Shocking times indeed. I just need to remember to stay grounded; You can never know exactly when and where technological progress will come from.
I can conduct 3 symphony orchestras at once.
I'm a super conductor.
Each leg of the triangle can carry 5GW of electricity.
5GW is a lot of power; to put that into perspective, the entire state of New York uses about 30GW at peak load on a hot summer day; the great power of Niagara Falls gives us about 5GW (Canadian + US generators).
Central Point of Failure.
Attention terrorists: we have a new target to aim for.
The USA's infrastructure is full of bottlenecks and chokepoints.
Internet/phone/gas/power, airlines, stock markets, highways, warehouses, ports, payment processing, etc etc etc.
This article comes to mind:
"Classify my dissertation? Crap. Does this mean I have to redo my PhD?" he said. "They're worried about national security. I'm worried about getting my degree." For academics, there always has been the imperative to publish or perish. In Gorman's case, there's a new concern: publish and perish.
He eventually got his PHD and started a GIS company called FortiusOne.
[Fuck Beta]
o0t!
The three power grids are out of phase with each other. Are they doing a AC->DC->AC conversion? It was my understanding that the biggest technical hurdle to connecting the grids was the difficult problem of shifting the phase of one grid to another.
Oh no, they've disabled our ability to sell electricity from one grid to another!
I can see how that can be confusing seeing as how language is completely static and the majority of the world refers to both South and North America together when using the words "America" and "American".
Those damn United Statesmans, thinking they can refer to their own country however they please.
Meh, why is that getting flagged as insightful.
The current cynicism that any improvement in infrastructure is
a) only for the money
b) going to ruin the planet
c) a target for terrorists
d) too late
is getting really old.
The proposal allows for better distribution of power generation across the continent. Even if it was a target for terrorism so what. If you want to curl up in a little ball because the terrorists might get you knock yourself out.
BTW, knocking this section out doesn't take all 3 grids down.
...to Santa Fe?
Amarillo doesn't even rhyme!
What about (Yellow Rose)? That would make sense.
I drank what? -- Socrates
Now we can build Gatling Lasers on our units, and we're one step closer to Fusion Power!
...we find out we aren't all exactly running 60 HZ after all.
If your only tool is a hammer, every problem becomes a nail.
Won't increasing efficiency lower energy prices? Am I right in thinking that there really isn't any incentive for power companies to do this?
Isn't think just one giant Flux Capacitor?
Where are the hoverboards?
The article mentions a triangle of 8.5Miles per side, but not being used to dealing with large amounts of power.. (pretty much anything over 120V is over my head).. why do the superconducting pipes have to be that long?
Wouldn't it be cheaper to have the connections closer? or at that level of power, could there really be arc's 5 miles long? (or are there other issues related to crazy sine wave stuff?)
And really, I hope someday they decide to build one somewhere else too, like Colorado, or even further north. Then at least there are multiple points of failure.. (and if anyone gave a crap about texas, they would be invited into one of the other grids already, but obviously they think they are special...)
What are we going to do tonight Brain?
Central Point of Failure.
Actually, if you read the article, sounds like they're wiring it "delta" as opposed to "wye" so any individual cut merely reroutes around the long way... And yes I am very well aware that "delta" and "wye" means something very specific w/ regards to three phase power, I was just using the names for topological reference.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
...
Just wondering why superconductors suddenly make this feasable. 20 square miles just doesn't resolve to a very big number when looking at the length of the wire.
Deleted
Amarillo by propagation speed, I buzz at San Antone
Everything that Ive got is just what I turn on.
When that Renewable Energy is high in that Texas sky
Ill be pumping it to county fair.
Amarillo by propagation speed, amarillo Ill be there.
Took my amps in Houston, broke my conductivity in Santa Fe
Lost my Giga watts from resistance somewhere along the way
Well Ill be sell'n for peak when they pull that gate,
And Im hoping that regulator aint blind.
Amarillo by propagation speed, amarillos on my mind.
Amarillo by propagation speed, I buzz at San Antone.
Everything that Ive got is just what I turn on.
I cost a dime, but what I got is mine.
I aint rich, but lord Im reasonably priced.
Amarillo by propagation speed, amarillo Ill be there.
Amarillo by propagation speed, amarillo Ill be there.
Found this on the bottom of the article
Any statements in this release about future expectations, plans and prospects for the company, including our expectations regarding the future financial performance of the company and other statements containing the words "believes," "anticipates," "plans," "expects," "will" and similar expressions, constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. There are a number of important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by such forward-looking statements. Such factors include: we have a history of operating losses, and we may incur losses in the future; a significant portion of our revenues are derived from a single customer, and a reduction in business with this customer could adversely affect our operating results; adverse changes in domestic and global economic conditions could adversely affect our operating results; changes in exchange rates could adversely affect our results from operations; our common stock may experience extreme market price and volume fluctuations, which may prevent our stockholders from selling our common stock at a profit and could lead to costly litigation against us that could divert our management’s attention; if we fail to implement our business strategy, our financial performance and our growth could be materially and adversely affected; we may not realize all of the sales expected from our backlog of orders and contracts; many of our revenue opportunities are dependent upon subcontractors and other business collaborators, and a reduction in orders stemming from these companies could adversely affect our operating results; our products face intense competition, which could limit our ability to acquire or retain customers; our success is dependent upon attracting and retaining qualified personnel and our inability to do so could significantly damage our business and prospects; and our international operations are subject to risks that we do not face in the U.S., which could have an adverse effect on our operating results. Reference is made to these and other factors discussed in the "Risk Factors" section of the company's most recent quarterly or annual report filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In addition, any forward-looking statements included in this press release represent the company's views as of the date of this release. While the company anticipates that subsequent events and developments may cause the company's views to change, the company specifically disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing the company's views as of any date subsequent to the date this press release is issued.
Makes me wonder...
Selling software wont make you money, selling a service will.
For those who aren't sure where that triangle is, a map.
Isnt this going backwards with so much research being done to distributed renwable energy systems? We are creating a central point of failure or an alien magnetic launch pad. Think about wrapping those super conductors in a coil? I would rather see these dollars spent creating more solar/wind/wave/tide/thermal/etc farms in a distributed system where the brown outs are occuring. By creating these types of farms, the overall cost of creating more decreases as more companies are willing to research and manufacture the components because now there is a market. As a research project on super conducting it is probably a good project. And I admit my 5 min of research qualifies me only as highly informed, not an expert.
My guess would be inductance would be one limiting factor but probably more limiting would be the abilities of the various grids to pump power in or out across the AC/DC and DC/AC converters.
BTW, knocking this section out doesn't take all 3 grids down.
You mean it doesn't necessarily take all 3 grids down, if it's not designed to.
Well, I would design it to. And I would have a big switch where one setting was "America On" and the other would say "America Off". And it would be on the outside of the fence.
Which is probably why they never let me design anything. :(
The enemies of Democracy are
Anything you find as a "forward-looking" press release on Yahoo finance is pretty dependable to be bullshit. In fact, there's probably a penny stock being run up right now using this press release as the bogus basis for such a run.
I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
Well if you are going to go all anal on this, at least freak out using correct information.
There is Canada. There is the United States of America. There is the United Mexican States.
I judt got a nre Kinesis keybiartf so please excusr ant egregiou typos.
Central Point of Failure.
Attention terrorists: we have a new target to aim for.
Maybe I'm missing something, but if this new thing failed wouldn't the system just degrade to what it currently is today?
Download free e-books, lectures, and tutorials at bookgoldmine.com
A continent-wide black-out will bring huge economies of scale...
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
The Americas: North America, Central America, South America.
NorthAmerica: Canada, the US, and Mexico.
Mexico: the United States of Mexico
America: the United States of America.
Is it that hard to understand?
Free Martian Whores!
Gee, all this time I thought it was Estados Unidos Mexicanos. Although I have seen them refer to themselves (inaccurately) as Estados Unidos de Sud America.
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
...The current cynicism that any improvement in infrastructure is a) only for the money b) going to ruin the planet c) a target for terrorists d) too late
is getting really old.
The proposal allows for better distribution of power generation across the continent. Even if it was a target for terrorism so what. ...
How about this criticism: poorly described technology from a dubious source.
First of all, I don't think this interconnect is intended to prevent one of the three major grids going down...if that were to happen, you'd want to disconnect the other two pronto so they don't go down with it. This is being sold as a way to efficiently move cheap electricity to places that need it and are willing to buy it. The article refers to it as a "renewable energy market hub". That's fine, in principle (and who dares oppose anything with the word "renewable" in it?).
But how does it work? There's generalities about how electrical transmissions and interconnects between the major power grids work, but nothing really about the superconducting cable, and why it's better than regular cable. That's not too surprising, if you consider that this is "financial news" aimed at getting people to buy stock in this exciting new venture. What's more disturbing is that when you follow the link to the company that's supposed to be doing this wonderful thing—American Superconductor—you don't get any better answers to these questions.
You do realize that we're not talking about room temperature superconductors here, right? "High temperature superconductors" is a relative term. Unless they have indeed invented something totally new and kept it totally secret, what we're talking about is a pipeline carrying liquid nitrogen with some superconducting tape wrapped around it. (See, for example, this more informative article from another company selling the same thing. (PDF!)
One major issue right off the bat is how much of the efficiency gained by using the superconductor is consumed by the coolant system. The article doesn't say exactly how long these superconducting conduits will be, and it seems you still need AC/DC/AC conversion, so what's the real gain over using regular cables, especially if we're only talking a mile or so?
It's also not clear just who is paying for this project. Is it the State of Oklahoma? The US Government (in "stimulation" mode)? Is it a private venture? Is it really a done and financed deal? This is a most unsatisfactory article, and I think some cynicism is warranted.
Disclaimer: The fact that I am a Texan and intend to give up my megawatts only if you pry them from my cold, dead fingers has not in the least influenced my position on this matter.
Great men are almost always bad men--Lord Acton's Corollary
Now we can go back in time four times!
Great! Go back and post this as the first post, and you might avoid getting modded "redundant".
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Apparently not as hard to understand as sarcasm =P
This is why I come to slashdot! A technical article with the right units! 5 GW of electricity. Not 100,000 volts of electricity, not 50,000 Amps of electricity, but 5 GW. Now, that's useful!
And none of that nonsense revisionist crap making an established standard of "GW" into "GiW" either.
I don't believe hard drive or floppy drive capacities have ever measured a megabyte as 2^20 bytes. That peculiarity has always been limited to RAM and to the measurements the software on the computer itself perform...
Having grown up with a kilobyte being 1024 bytes (and later on becoming more familiar with larger units like megabytes and finally a gigabyte before I learned you could have more than one of 'em...) I can relate to your resistance to that change. And the unit names they chose (kibibytes, mebibytes, gibibytes, etc.) are fairly silly-sounding... But... "kilo"-anything else is 1000 of it. "mega"-anything else is 1000000 of it. "giga"-anything else is 1000000000 of it. These are unit prefixes which predate the era of home computers - so really, I think this disambiguation is proper, and was long overdue.
Bow-ties are cool.
Does someone have more concrete information on what material they will use?
Central Point of Failure.
Attention terrorists: we have a new target to aim for.
Meh. I think they'd get more mileage out of attacking a target people really care about.
I mean, the reason the attacks in 2001 were effective was because human lives were involved - and the whole thing played out such that we got to watch events unfold on TV. Taking out a piece of infrastructure wouldn't get the same reaction. Even if people eventually died from not having power, the reaction would be more like "why the hell haven't we fixed this already? What's wrong with our leaders?" rather than the kind of trauma we got from the towers collapsing.
If we were involved in a full-scale war, then infrastructure targets would be worthwhile for our enemies to hit, because each target destroyed would damage our ability to wage war... and because a full-scale assault would be able to take out enough of them to cause some real damage. But losing a chunk of the power grid would not be hugely disruptive, and it would be repaired.
Bow-ties are cool.
, not because of spectacular electrical properties. The obvious problem with moisture reactivity, as well as the less obvious problem of making secure electrical connections to such a soft material greatly limited its use, however.
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If you've had an article open for a while, do a refresh before you post your comment. That way you'll be able to see any comments posted since you opened the window, and avoid "redundant" moderation.
This is particularly important for articles further down the page.
how many ZPM can it handle?
We have loads more sun, less clouds, and great geo-thermal potential. The West to the midwest has loads of wind.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Tres Amigas? This is the U.S., not Mexico. Let's give it an English name, please.
I mean, come on. I have nothing against Spanish in particular, but it's a U.S. facility, let's give it a U.S. name. Otherwise, why not call the new trade center in New York "El Stupido"?
Meh, why is that getting flagged as insightful.
The current cynicism that any improvement in infrastructure is
a) only for the money
b) going to ruin the planet
c) a target for terrorists
d) too late
is getting really old.
The proposal allows for better distribution of power generation across the continent. Even if it was a target for terrorism so what. If you want to curl up in a little ball because the terrorists might get you knock yourself out.
BTW, knocking this section out doesn't take all 3 grids down.
Exactly.
Money issues? This will provide thousands of jobs, the ability for power systems in remote ares to be built to poewr distant cities, and increase the profitability of the power companies. It solves issues of where to put power generation systems and could reduce construction (and legal battle) costs by 2/3rds or more. For every dollar they'll save, you'll be lucky to see $0.50 come off your bill, meaning it;s a LOT more money for them. THEY WANT THIS and so do we, is that not proof?
Planetary issues? This allows us to deploy mass wind, water, and solar systems where we could not due to transmission distances and disconnected grid infrastructure. now we can access cheap clean energy and give it to anyone instead of building less efficint power plants where the power is needed. This will be the beginning of the elimination of coal and gas power across most of the land.
Terrorism? First it's a proof of concept, and only facilitates a transfer system between other currently completely self sufficient (soft of) systems. This is a beginning, not a complete system. Even a terorist strike on this new triangle (which is self redundant btw, requiring 2 seperate coordinated strikes at a minimum, against underground buried cables in what's likely to be a secure area) would not cause more than a few second brownout as the grid rebalanced. Besides, these cables, do you have ANY idea of their construction??? significant bombardment would have trouble causing radical damage to the cable itself, and you're not getting a bomb inside the secured areas where the interconnect will be.
Further, being a POC, these cables will be deployed everywhere from this central spoke, creating more nodes in the future, and is the begining of a replacement redundant grid system. When deployed there will be fewer points of failure than in today's grid, and few if any single points that could take out more than small towns.
Too late? Well, late, I'll agree, we should have started deployment 20 years ago when we had the technology. Oh, wait... We did, 22 years ago! Now it;s proven, and being deployed, and will take 30-40 years to completely roll out, at a cost of nearly 10 trillion. but, it;s not too late... Too late implies even if we built it, there would be no benefit as we'll have already collapsed. Yes it;s too late to deploy it in the most cost effective method, and we have a stressed grid, and may need to build a few temporary power plants not necessary if we put a few trillion behind this a while back, but in the end the extra research actually saved us a lot of money, and allowed better long term planning. This is a 50 year process to replace a grid, not a 3-4 year build out...
I do propose we back off the electric car bandwagon a bit and spend the money instead on some additional superlines like this, and some more wind farms, and some dotyenergy RFTS fuel manufacturing plants (www.dotyenergy.com) to halt our oil expansion and curb import demand, and give our grid time to grow to actually be able to power those cars, and battery technology time to mature so we'll want to both drive them and pay for them. People do blow the super grid technology out of proportion. Most of those people are fed by propoganda and FUD from employees of local power monopolies who will no longer be able to overcharge for power, but i could give a fuck about the greedy minority.
There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
Surely they have enabled it. Unless they packed it onto huge capacitor banks/batteries loaded into lorries and shipped it between the grids beforehand. Or there could have been existing wires in which case nothing has changed other than possible throughput.
the new interconnect should help prevent this behaviour as it will allow the transfer of power between regions where it was previously not possible.
yup, and they fixed that. and systems like this are part of the fix, not a complication requiring additional resources.
plus, explain how to take out a buried, 0.3 meter thick, hunk of earthquake re-enforced metal line? Short of digging a massive hole, planting a half ton or more of good high order explosive, probably a shaped charge, while not getting cooked by the 5GW charge, and without tripping buried sensors along the cable run (other wires buried a few feet shallower than the main lines, which help detect when some dumbass is digging in the wrong place or without a permit to prevent accidental damage to the lines), and the fact that its not one line but several (typically at least 3, a dozen or so meters apart each). It may be possible to take out 1 line, but not the minimum of at least 4 it would take to knock this out. The interchange systems would be well protected by security and likely monitoerd 24x7 by sattelite. Also, the land around this area is not exacly highly populated, and easy to patrol...
A few hack terrorists with a half assed plan are only going to get caught. Nothing better than good bait sometimes...
There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
your being an 'a' hole and I understand your posting anonymously. It is a documented fact that companies will spend as much capitol on safety as needed. Key word being needed. If you look on many noted failure systems, you will see examples of this. If companies had a conscience as you infer there wouldn't be a need for so many regulatory agencies as there are.
examples
Three Mile Island: Poorly trained personnel, lack of proper sensor and back up systems. Fix Invest in simulators better technology.
New York Black Out: Tree's which require trimming weren't and lack off redundancy.
New Orleans: Failed Levees which were documented for cutting corners to preserve cost. In addition lack of upkeep on said levees.
Countless numbers of cases of known hazardous materials being used in consumer goods.
Finally, when 3 big corporations like this converge and get together to better control the problematics of that industry, only one good thing can happen, make more money..by raising the prices in agreement.
..and not one "Menáge á Trois" joke? Odd, especially considering the project name: TresAmigas (loosely translated: three girlfriends). Yay, karma-burn...
"God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh." -- Voltaire
Seems like this is the dawn of a new age in power transmission. The implications are many and they are huge. A lot of energy is lost in transmission, and a lot of energy was not exploited because distance prohibited cost-effective transmission.
It will take time and experience to work out the details of this technology, but its arrival is pretty important. The impact will feel evolutionary because it will necessarily be implemented in a gradual manner as the technology matures, but the consequences will be revolutionary.
And this is one of the things that the United States can only do locally. Not much of this will be imported. And new sources of energy will be developed to meet the potential markets opened up by superconductor transmission. Mexico, for example, can develop solar generation all along the border to meet American market needs.
Best regards.
Bad example..New Orleans levee failures were a PUBLIC (Government) side failure (Corp of Engineers underbudgeting and local levee board stealing money) whereas your rant has to do with PRIVATE industry where expense of safety has to be less or equal to fines/lost time/lost revenue from any accident.
Because New Orleans was definitely run by a company cutting corners...
Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
Copper is very expensive, and not getting any cheaper. The amount of copper needed to transmit 7000 amps, which is the figures others have bandied about above, is immense.
Suffice to say copper has not been used for transmission lines for some time. It's all aluminium-clad steel these days. Even then, the amount of cable needed is huge.
Prediction for end of Universe #42: Fencepost error in Quantum_bogosort.cpp
How does connecting three previously (more or less) independent power grids produce a single point of failure? If you blow up this thing you end up with... what exists now.
In theory that would be expected but with a the Texas grid probably selling power to both the East and West grids if the interconnect goes down the Texas might over-volt and shut down while East and West might under-volt and either brownout or blackout.
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
Nahhh - they're either attempting to wake Godzilla, Rhodan or Godzuki unless the Japanese Ministry of Defense was correct and the Gundums aren't in Japan.
Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
On no, we'll cut your asses off first, trust me. Viva la Tejas!
Far further than the 5-10 miles this connector is talking about using copper, or aluminium.
Most of the energy losses are at the power station not in the wires.
Deleted
How does connecting three previously (more or less) independent power grids produce a single point of failure? If you blow up this thing you end up with... what exists now.
mod parent +1 insightful
I think the parent is the first insightful post of this thread.
********* sig: If you don't like the law, get filthy stinking rich, and buy a better one.
a) only for the money
Not sure why this one is lumped in with the rest. Improvements in infrastructure, generally, are done for the money. No one builds out bit infrastructure for fun. It's always done with the expectation of some payback. In this case, transferring power between grids cheaply lets you do more efficient load balancing, which means you can sell power for the same rate, but buy it (on average) for less and make more profit. The total power wasted will be lower, so we need to burn less fossil fuels and everyone wins. This even applies to government-funded infrastructure. It's done with the aim of increasing trade or production capability, which increases earnings and therefore tax revenue.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
I need a secret underground lair built. Do you think you could design it for me?
Slashdot: where don knuth is an idiot because he cant grasp the awesome power of php
The Japanese Ministry of Defence has never commented on this subject. The Ministry of Agriculture stated that it was not in charge of Gundam.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
The idea that any improvement in infrastructure is only for the money is not even a bad thing. I would want infrastructure improvements to save money for the simple reason that we use money as a proxy for resources, and if somebody is going to expend huge amounts of resources on upgrading something then I want it to be more efficient as a result. Of course I would treat safety as a given in any design (that is everything has to meet safety constraints to even be considered by cost effectiveness).
One disadvantage of seeing markets in everything is that you become aware of the holes. (Sssh don't tell the rabid libertarians on slashdot but markets are not perfect allocators of resources). So while you are correct in that knocking out this section doesn't *currently* take all three grids down I would expect that to remain the case. The idea of connecting the three grids is to increase the size of the market-place - in particular resources that are only available part-time can be sold to a wider market to ensure 100% usage during those times.
The problem is that redundancy will be reduced by normal market operations. It's not in my local interest to leave this power station here in Texas idling so that the grid has redundancy. If I'm not getting paid I'll shut it down. In the three smaller markets this wouldn't have happened because I wasn't competing with distant supplies. But once it has happened, if you shut down the interconnect then demand will exceed supply in my area where before it would not. Hence knocking out that section will take the three grids down once market conditions have adapted to expect it being there.
Slashdot: where don knuth is an idiot because he cant grasp the awesome power of php
Well, clearly, you take some of the square miles and cut them in half from corner to corner.
That's where the .5 mile comes from.
How are you going to use 22 square miles and one triangle mile to make a triangle? The whole concept is silly. If you had, say, 21 square miles, and eight triangle miles made by cutting square miles in half diagonally, then you could make a right triangle...
But I'm guessing this isn't even a right triangle we're talking about...
Bow-ties are cool.
What's nice with a system like that is if they make truly connect each section together you get a inductance that carry 15 GW(3*5GW per section). That's useful for load balancing but you can also store that energy in the system.
Since it's a superconductor you get one freaking huge battery. It's not a lot to run en entire state but it should give a few moment in case of power failure.