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How Power Grids Work

The Power Plant

A breakdown of the major power plants in the United States, by type.
Photo courtesy U.S. Department of Energy

Electrical power starts at the power plant. In almost all cases, the power plant consists of aspinning electrical generator. Something has to spin that generator — it might be a water wheel in a hydroelectric dam, a largediesel engineor a gas turbine. But in most cases, the thing spinning the generator is asteam turbine. The steam might be created by burning coal, oil or natural gas. Or the steam may come from anuclear reactor.

Electricity generation is the single largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States [source:EPA]. That's why it's so important to develop more renewable sources of energy. In 2014, 67 percent of America's electricity came from fossil fuels like coal and natural gas. Hydroelectric energy was the largest renewable energy source, followed by solar, wind and geothermal power. In 2014, 6 percent of America's electricity was produced by hydropower, while solar, wind and thermal energytogethercomprised another 5 percent [source:EIA].

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No matter what energy source spins the generator, commercial electrical generators of any size generate what is called3-phase AC power. To understand 3-phase AC power, it is helpful to understand single-phase power first.