How Electricity Gets to You

2,369,895
0
Published 2021-12-02
Buy your custom domain or email for 10% off at Hover.com/wendover

Watch Extremities at youtube.com/extremities

Buy a Wendover Productions t-shirt: standard.tv/collections/wendover-productions/produ…

Subscribe to Half as Interesting (The other channel from Wendover Productions): youtube.com/halfasinteresting

Youtube:    / wendoverproductions  
Instagram: Instagram.com/sam.from.wendover
Twitter: www.Twitter.com/WendoverPro
Sponsorship Enquiries: [email protected]
Other emails: [email protected]
Reddit: Reddit.com/r/WendoverProductions

Writing by Sam Denby
Editing by Alexander Williard
Animation by Josh Sherrington
Sound by Graham Haerther
Thumbnail by Simon Buckmaster

Select footage courtesy Getty and AP; Select imagery courtesy Geolayers; Select music courtesy Epidemic sound

All Comments (21)
  • @matthowells6382
    One of the most British things I've ever heard is that the power grid has a massive spike in demand at certain periods as people boil kettles to make tea, often in ad breaks and at the end of certain shows 😂
  • Being an Electrical Power Engineer, I can say Sam explained this complicated topic best one can in the easiest way. Thank you Sam for making video on my favorite topic.
  • @TonyXiang8787
    As a PhD in electrical power engineering, I am amazed how this video explains the power system in such an intuitive way.
  • @robertb6889
    I know a guy who works for Idaho Power as an engineer and they were talking about experiments to see if they could run a small town purely off the local hydroelectric dam. They tried multiple times, but the lead-lag time was just too high for their control systems to be able to compensate. It was fun to talk to him since he had such deep insight into how our grid works.
  • @ShadowRaptor8
    Glad to see Wendover is talking about current affairs, it's an area that has a lot of potential. And he does all this at no charge.
  • @DrDinoNuggies
    Nothing slaps harder than sitting down for a 20 minute video on the power grid
  • @TimeBucks
    you covered just about everything I think a general audience would need to know.
  • @specialopsdave
    I like the idea of nuclear to cover the true baseload, and renewable+batteries to cover the swings, with renewable spikes being used to generate hydrogen or desalinate water
  • @johncochran8497
    The statement that supply has to exactly match load every instant is a bit too strict, although it is true. The saving grace of the electrical grid is all those turbines and the angular inertia they all represent. Whenever the load exceeds supply, the extra energy needed is extracted from that inertia and the turbines start to slow down. And whenever supply exceeds load, the reverse happens and the turbines start to speed up. And because there's a MASSIVE amount of inertia, the rate at which the turbines speed up, or slow down is fairly slow, giving the power companies time to adjust the amount of power they supply the turbines. So depending upon where in the world you live, the power grid has a nominal frequency of 50 or 60 Hz. But that frequency is only nominal, it starts to decrease when more loads are turned on and the power plants start to increase their output to match the load, and the frequency increases when loads are turned off and the power plants are taking time to decrease their output to match the new load.
  • @miffu_
    me, a lebanese person: that's the neat part, it doesn't!
  • @zlinedavid
    Your explanation on usage patterns was both compact and accurate. I work in wholesale/retail pricing for one of the larger independent power producers in the US and that’s one of the better “everyday” explanations I’ve heard. Explaining the differences between consumption (how much is being used overall) and demand (how much is being used at any one point in time) gets tricky.
  • I can’t get over how good your videos are. I feel like I’ve learned more about how the world works from your channel over anything else I’ve read or watched since I got done with school.
  • @TheMrFabian1
    "If you flip a switch in LA, that can cause a turbine in Washington to spin." Doesn't work in Texas, though.
  • @tooljockey2777
    There is a lot more complexity than this even. I work for the electrical system operator here in Ontario and we control the price of electricity. Not only does supply have to match demand but you have to make sure everybody is getting paid fairly. Every 5 minutes an auction occurs where produces and consumers can bid on what they're willing to pay for electricity. It gets insanely complicated figuring out exactly who needs to pay who for what. For example the baseloads shouldn't get paid the same price/kwh as the natural gas plants, since the natural gas plants are what do the work to balance the supply and demand. We also provide incentives for green environmentally friendly power stations so that they can stay competitive in the market. All this goes on behind the scenes and none of the daily electricity users know about it.
  • @MrMalthusMusic
    Underground cable jointer here, mostly working on 11kV to 240/415 substations etc. Great video, you really covered a broad range of important topics concisely!
  • @JoelReid
    In South Australia, and soon Western Australia, new legislation is stating that all roof top solar panels need to have the ability to be disconnected from the grid by the grid provider remotely to level out the grid. This is to make sure that the system can cope with any fluctuations during the day.
  • @k.5152
    hey sam do you think you could talk more about the drought here in Colorado? I'm sure you have also been DEEPLY concerned with the impacts of this incredibly warm winter we're having right now. also I want more Colorado content and you make the best.
  • @totobogos
    I feel you've missed an opportunity to talk about Hydro-Québec; which is only second to China and Brazil in terms of total hydro-electric capacity despite being a state-corporation representing only about 8 million people. Nearly 100% of the electricity of Quebec is supplied by hydro-electric dams, with the majority of them being thousands of kms away in the North of the province. Its pretty much a full case-study of a fully hydro-powered economy and its drawbacks, like the potential damage to the environment. It also relates to the US given there are plans to massively increase the transfer capacity to the Northeast states.
  • @ScrapKing73
    Growing up in Canada where there’s lots of hydro-electric production, including gigantic amounts in Quebec (99% of their domestic power production) and British Columbia (97% of B.C’s production), I’ve grown up with the idea of production being really far from demand. Great video, it was insightful to learn more about how we got from where we started to where we are now.
  • @jakobbauz
    Human civilization never ceases to amaze me. Thank you for another great video Sam!