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In the UK air-conditioning is not common, although it is being used more as the climate heats up. On a bright day with solar power producing pretty much full output, most of it will not be used. An average house might only be using low hundreds of watts - perhaps 60W for a TV, 40W for a laptop (maybe double for a desktop), perhaps an intermittent 100W for a fridge/freezer (I have no idea what the average consumption would be as it would depend on how much the doors are opened!), a few watts for assorted wallwarts, no lighting required during the day, and cooking probably using gas. Even if a microwave is used, you're probably looking at 1.5kW for only 5 or 10 minutes.Huh? A single residential PV is enough to *power* 20 homes?Or, just solar "farms"?>
They can drop out entire blocks of switchgear to take a given region or zone
offline (as would happen if a fault condition trips a breaker).
>
The big problem on a really sunny day is that an individual house roof 4kW PV
installation in late afternoon in the UK will be potentially exporting all of
it to the grid. That is about 20-30 houses worth of electricity for each solar
roof.
A 4-5KW installation would barely cover the home on which
it was sited.
E.g., our "average" (24/7) load is about 1KW. Of course, that
neglects the peaks that we see OFTEN throughout the daylight
hours (night load is relatively small -- a few LED lights
plus my computers)
They drop say 100MW of load or approx 500k houses @ 200W but with 2% of themThe 200W figure is mystifying.
generating 4kW then they also drop off 40MW of local generation.
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