I don't understand how what you said fits into what the article claims;
Shortly after President Joe Biden offered tax credits to anyone buying solar panels, a Colorado homeowner named Stacie took out loans to install $30,000 worth of panels on her roof. Nearly six months later, however, those panels sat unused, generating no power.
The problem seemed to have a simple fix: Stacie's energy provider merely needed to hook the panels up to its power grid—but there's no room.
That has to do with somethign completely different. Solar panels draw energy from sunlight regardless of being hooked up to the state's grid or not.
the article say that panels are there, installed but not connected, why are they on a "waiting list" ?
because the "grid" cannot allocate any more "unreliable generators"
if the ratio of unreliable generators is over something10 or maybe 20% the whole grid becomes unstable and collapse
No, that isn't the given explanation. The (((article))) is making the false claim of;
Nearly 1,300 gigawatts worth of green energy projects, for example, are waiting to be connected to power, according to a recent Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory report. The country's entire electric grid has an installed power capacity of just 1,250 gigawatts.
There's too much energy for the system to handle, which sure could be a thing if you tried to pump more energy in. Issue is automated on / off switches exist. IS there power draw (meaning the system can handle and wants power) then turn the collection state of the panels to on, if there isn't then off.
This isn't complicated.
What you wrote shows that you need to study how grid reliability is achieved
ok, jews are in the loop regardless, they are sucking money out of everything
but it is not a jew problem, at the core
(post is archived)