Scott Weiner

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In the United States in the 1970s there were still two types of electricity producers that were not part of the national grid. First were the cogeneration plants, like the New Hampshire trash immolation facility. These produced so much excess heat that running their steam through a small electric generator had no appreciable effect on the factory’s other tasks. Second were the hippies and other do-it-yourself small power innovators.
The Grid: Electrical Infrastructure for a New Era
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