Howard Lutnick
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I see the head nodding.
If we need to add 100, after the meetings they had this morning, I think it's more than 100 gigawatts in the next five or seven years, the first thing to do is stop subtracting 100 at the same time you want to add 100.
But I think America became great by big, bold people making big, bold investments.
That's where we got here.
And then we've just drifted off track the last bunch of years and made it so hard to build something, so easy to stop something, and just a crazy love affair with intermittent, unreliable energy sources.
If you take all the batteries in the United States, you can store five minutes of power.
Five minutes.
It can be the majority on a sunny day in the summertime.
That's not what matters.
In PJM, where we are right now, at peak demand this year, 97% of electricity, wind, solar, and batteries delivered 3%.
That's when it matters.
Absolutely.
Let's talk Texas.
So the peak demand times in Texas have been cold spells.
They're high-pressure systems in the wintertime.
Wind and solar go on vacation.
They're 35% of the capacity in Texas, 8% of the delivered power at peak demand.
Yeah, but those are the two weeks that matter, right?
In Yuri, when they weren't ready, over 200 people died.
We don't want people to die.