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Power

Why Our Antiquated Power Grid Needs Battery Storage 334

Lucas123 writes: Last year, renewable energy sources accounted for half of new installed electric-generation capacity (natural gas units made up most of the remainder). As more photovoltaic panels are installed on rooftops around the nation, an antiquated power grid is being overburdened by a bidirectional load its was never engineered to handle. The Hawaiian Electric Company, for example, said it's struggling with electricity "backflow" that could destabilize its system. Batteries for distributed renewable power has the potential to mitigate the load on the national grid by allowing a redistribution of power during peak hours. Because of this, Tesla, which is expected to announce batteries for homes and utilities on Thursday, and others are targeting a market estimated to be worth $1.2B by 2019. Along with taking up some of the load during peak load, battery capacity can be used when power isn't being generated by renewable systems, such as at night and during inclement weather. That also reduces grid demand.
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Why Our Antiquated Power Grid Needs Battery Storage

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  • by Michael Woodhams ( 112247 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @03:13AM (#49566827) Journal

    There are many ways to 'store' electricity. Batteries are just one.

    I rather like this one [isentropic.co.uk], a thermal storage solution. Putting air into and out of bladders under deep water is a very simple method, as is moving water up and down hills. Then there are flywheels and fixed volume compressed air storage. (The air bladders above are fixed pressure compressed air storage.) There other thermal storage possibilities, but getting good round trip efficiency is tricky.

    There are non-traditional battery techniques too: flow batteries (liquid electrolytes in tanks, adding storage capacity is as easy as adding tanks full of electrolyte) and molten metal batteries (take the idea of aluminium smelting and make it reversible).

    All the non-battery alternatives I can think of work at industrial scale, so if you're looking for a household/small business solution, I think that at least for now batteries are it.

    • I rather like this one, a thermal storage solution.

      Note that they don't tell you what the efficiency or capacity are. As you store more power, they lose more energy. Fairly worthless. It also incorporates a special and expensive engine. Fail, fail.

      Putting air into and out of bladders under deep water is a very simple method,

      No, no it isn't. First, air-based storage is always horribly lossy due to loss of the thermal energy; your above example tries to solve this with technology and argon, but it is thus complex and runs at high pressures and will be prone to failure. Second, the bladders will have to be replaced regularly, because un

      • by caseih ( 160668 )

        That doesn't change the fact that on the power grid itself, there is no storage, so any efficiency, even bad efficiency is better than nothing.

        As to your used battery idea, it is not a good one. Most used batteries are car batteries. And no they are not an excellent way to add more storage capacity. A used car battery won't hold a charge, or deliver current. That's why they are replaced after all.

        • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

          A used car battery won't hold a charge, or deliver current. That's why they are replaced after all.

          I think you might have a misconception here -- it sounds like you are thinking of the engine-starter batteries used in a gasoline-engine car. The used batteries the previous poster is referring to are the (much larger) battery packs from an electric car. Those batteries are typically swapped out when their capacity deteriorates to the point where the car's maximum range is no longer acceptable. In that state, the batteries are still perfectly capable of holding a charge and delivering current; just not

  • Hawaiian Electric (Score:3, Informative)

    by NoKaOi ( 1415755 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @03:36AM (#49566897)

    Hawaiian Electric is full of crap. It's an excuse to charge people thousands of dollars for an "interconnect study" before allowing them to install a grid-tie system, which is totally bogus. It's essentially them making it more difficult/expensive to install solar, and when you do jump through that hoop, they get to extort a big chunk of money from you.

    • by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @03:49AM (#49566935)

      Spoken by someone who truly does not understand how unstable an electric grid really is. If there is more power injected into the grid than there is demand very bad things happen.

      • by NoKaOi ( 1415755 )

        Spoken by someone who truly does not understand how unstable an electric grid really is. If there is more power injected into the grid than there is demand very bad things happen.

        Spoken by someone who doesn't live in Hawaii. Here on Maui, an engineering study was done that showed the interconnect study requirement was unnecessary, and that what they charge for it is totally overblown. But because the members of the PUC are too busy getting blow jobs (presumably metaphorically) from HECO they won't do anything about it.

        • References please.

          • Yes, references please: what exactly is happening if you pump more energy into the grid then there is demand ... and how does it happen?

            Your +4 insightful post, two posts back, is just bollocks.

            I could tell you what happens but I guess it is more fun and educating for you to read up a bit ...

            Fearmonger ... that would be a modding we need.

        • by tomhath ( 637240 )
          There are studies on both sides by groups with agendas. Pick the one you want to believe, but take them all with a big grain of salt.
      • Oh, c'mon, sense and facts to debunk a conspiracy theory? Where's your tinfoil and kool-aid man?

        (Seriously, the scientific and engineering illiteracy rate here on Slashdot is staggering - even it weren't a site whose denizens pride themselves on being the exact opposite.)

    • Why would anyone install solar on a volcanic active island where there is unlimited heat energy at ground level. It seems to me that Hawai should be powering half of America with its geothermal energy.
      • The electric company wants to expand geothermal. There's considerable local opposition. Part of it is because the volcanism on Hawaii is very volatile--there's been incidents of accidentally releasing poisonous gas from the test facilities. Also there's religious issues--the volcanoes on Hawaii are sacred to a lot of the native population.

  • by joelholdsworth ( 1095165 ) on Tuesday April 28, 2015 @04:45AM (#49567133)
    They should be build a pumped hydro storage system - like Dinorwig in Wales [wikipedia.org]. These installations are so simple - I don't know why they're not more common.
    • by Chrisq ( 894406 )

      They should be build a pumped hydro storage system - like Dinorwig in Wales [wikipedia.org]. These installations are so simple - I don't know why they're not more common.

      They are very simple where you have an abundant supply of water and suitable hills or mountains. In other places not so much

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )
      The generating station at Niagara Falls is a better example. But pumped water requires a big reservoir and lots of excess generation capacity to be worthwhile. It doesn't make sense on a small scale.
  • The entire distribution grid needs to re-engineered and rebuilt from the ground up. Hare-brained politically/financially-driven motivated patch schemes are like applying kluges to legacy code; yeah it might work for awhile, but eventually you'll need a newer system. Why buy buckets and plugs for a leaky boat when you need a new boat?

  • Hawaii would be a good fit for the system outlined in this recent story [slashdot.org].

    Install enough renewables to have a large excess of power, and use the excess to generate diesel fuel and alleviate Hawaii's high fuel prices.

  • by azav ( 469988 )

    Use compressed air storage or large water reservoirs where water is pumped between levels and energy is regenerated by hydro generators when it flows back down.

    These are established technologies.

    • These are established technologies.

      Yes, and the former is horribly lossy while the latter has significant environmental impact, and as such is only suitable for limited sites. Established doesn't mean good, or shall we slap a slave collar around your neck and send you down a diamond mine?

  • Our local nuclear station has three enormous batteries that hold GWh of electricity for peak times. They are called Lakes Jocassee, Keowee, and Bad Creek.

    During the night when the nuclear station generates excess power, water is pumped uphill through the succession of lakes. During the day, when peak demand hits, water flows downhill to generate extra power. It's efficient and relatively cheap to maintain over time.

    The surfaces of Bad Creek (at the top) and Jocassee (in the middle) can fall tens of feet ove

  • They does?

    Funny, I would've thought the Fark Nitpicking Patrol would have been full of early risers.

  • Just buy your own battery pack and cut off the grid connection completely. Problem solved. That's what I plan to do because National Grid is mostly bandits now - with double digit rate increases annually lately. They claim it's a natural gas shortage because there are only two pipelines in the state. I call bullshit because I know regular LNG shipments come in via big boats.

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