Episode 48: Why the Grid Keeps Saying “Wait” — And How Smart Energy Users Opt Out
Failed to add items
Add to cart failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
Written by:
About this listen
You can’t gamble on a billion-dollar power plant — which is why large energy projects don’t move forward until the grid says yes. And right now, the grid is saying wait for years.
In this episode of The Clean Energy Edge, Russ Bates explains why interconnection delays have quietly become one of the biggest constraints on grid reliability and new power generation. Across the U.S., billions of dollars in utility-scale projects are stuck in 5–10 year interconnection queues, even as electricity demand from AI data centers, electrification, extreme weather, and industrial growth continues to surge.
This isn’t a technology problem. It’s a grid process problem.
The episode breaks down:
-
Why large, centralized power plants can’t be built without interconnection approval
-
How overloaded interconnection queues are slowing new generation
-
Why utilities are often incentivized for delay rather than speed
-
The critical difference between utility-scale interconnection and behind-the-meter generation
-
How behind-the-meter solar and battery storage avoid regional queues by serving on-site load first
-
Why local generation reduces exposure to price volatility and outage risk while easing grid strain
Russ also explains why behind-the-meter clean energy isn’t ideology — it’s a strategic response to grid bottlenecks, rising electricity costs, and reliability risk.
Sponsored by NXTGEN Clean Energy Solutions, helping organizations deploy behind-the-meter solar, storage, and resilience strategies that reduce dependence on an increasingly constrained grid.
📩 Learn more: info@nxtgencleanenergy.com