The Grid

August 23, 2025

Rating: 4 of 5 – Type: Science

I grew up on a farm in the northern midwest. At that time power outages were not uncommon. After high school I moved to Chicago where during the great blizzard of 1967 when we were stranded in our apartments and finding bread at a local mom & pop’s corner store was major coup we still had power. Through the years residing and working in a number of areas from the Midwest, to Texas, to Australia we always had power. Now all three of our children work in the Power Industry I’ve become very interested in Power – how it’s produced, how it’s transmitted, and how it’s used.

Therefore I asked Google what are the best books on the Power Grid. The Grid: The Fraying Between Americans and Our Energy Future by Gretchen Bakke was on the top of the list. I bought the Kindle version and used the power from my Kindle’s battery to read it.

The lion’s share of the book narrates the Grid’s history from its humble beginnings starting at Edison’s Pearl Street Station in 1892 to the present day.

Then it transitions into a few of the famous power outages of the past 25 years, what caused the outages, and in some cases the steps taken by the affected customers to insulate themselves from the Grid’s brittleness.

Of course, the book covers Enron and the Grid’s transition to the free market in great detail

The book’s final sections detail the Grid’s current brittleness, the emerging technologies and the problems they cause, the financial crisis, the increasing demand for power the Grid can’t supply, and the trends for the future.

In summary, The Grid chronoicles America’s transition to the “Electrical Age” and the Grid that made it possible.

Notes:

  1. The planet is powered by electricity; the Grid is but the backbone to generate and deliver Electricity. I did not mention electricity once in the book! Amazing or bad writing?
  2. All of my blog posts are now book reviews. I used to write about travel, gardening, and other the like. However, I’m now homebound. My life is taking care of my wife, reading books, watching TV, and the Internet. I find nothing worth writing about on TV or the internet. Writing about politics , the environment, except Silent Spring, and climate change depresses me. Therefore I choose to write book reviews blog posts.
  3. According to Gemini the Grid’s biggest problems 10 years after the book’s publication have not changed:
    • Outdated equipment
    • Increased demand
    • Vulnerability to extreme weather
    • Integrating renewable energy
    • Cybersecurity and Digitalization (This item is new)
    • Lack of investment and modernization

Big wind, no power

May 28, 2024

Woke this morning at 5. Took Gwen to the bathroom. Laid down and then the wind picked up. 75mph in our neighborhood. Lots of rain. No power for 6 hours but feel lucky. Thousands are still in the dark in the DFW area. #event


One hot Summer

September 8, 2023

Today, September 8, the high temperature in DFW was 109. Overall, this is our third hottest Summer in North Texas since we’ve been recording temperatures in 1898 according to the National Weather Service. I find it interesting the local and national TV newscasts state this is the second hottest Summer on record

I’ve lived in the DFW area through all of the 5 hottest Summer:

Year/Avg Temp

  1. 2011/90.5
  2. 1980/89.2
  3. 2023/88.7
  4. 1998/88.3
  5. 2022/88.2

Lack of rain also accompanies hot weather here and this Summer was no exception. If you don’t count the .2 inches of rain DFW received, which we did not we’ve gone over 60 days without rain. (The record is 84 days).

The photo below was taken on one of the walking trails in our neighborhood. A typical August/September day in North Texas and everything is brown except for trees.

Walking Trail

 

Although the temperature was 109 today the humidity was 19%. I felt more comfortable outside in the shade today than at Cardinal games in 90 degree, 90% humidity weather.