Local capacity before LNG
A local-capacity-first model would use open energy modeling, distributed generation, storage and demand flexibility to help regions compare LNG imports against buildable local alternatives. It targets the planning and procurement layer where LNG often wins by appearing dispatchable and financeable.
Thesis
Bitcoin / decentralization role
Coordination mechanism
Verification / trust model
Failure modes
- • Seasonal storage and industrial heat needs may still favor gas or LNG.
- • Open models can be ignored if procurement rules favor incumbent fuel contracts.
- • Distributed portfolios can underperform if installation quality, maintenance or demand-response participation is weak.
Adoption path
- • Use open models for public resource-planning comparisons in LNG-exposed regions.
- • Pilot local solar, wind, storage and demand-response portfolios against specific gas-peaker or LNG-import use cases.
- • Scale procurement through co-ops, municipal utilities and large buyers once measured reliability is credible.
Decentralization fit
72.0/10
Coordination credibility
60.0/10
Implementation feasibility
56.0/10
Incumbent pressure