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Power Technology

The Dirty Truth About Green Batteries (gizmodo.com) 202

If we're going to avoid the worst consequences of climate change, we'll need an energy revolution. But there's a big problem. Making that future a reality will, among other things, require a lot of batteries: batteries to charge our electric cars; batteries to store solar power collected while the sun's up and wind power harnessed when it's gusty out. And as a new report by researchers at the University of Technology Sydney warns, that's likely to drive demand for the metals used to build green batteries -- as well as wind turbines and solar panels -- through the roof.

From a report: In other words the clean tech boom is, at least in the short term, likely to fuel a mining boom. And that won['t come without cost. "We already know about the environmental, social, and human rights impacts extraction is posing to front line communities right now," Payal Sampat, mining program director at Earthworks, which commissioned the new report, told Earther. "It's kind of unimaginable to think about... how it would be considered sustainable to scale up those impacts that many fold and still be reaping benefits."

Much like our smartphones and computers, the high-tech energy infrastructure of tomorrow requires a host of metals and minerals from across the periodic table and the planet. The lithium-ion batteries used in EVs and energy storage require not just lithium, but often cobalt, manganese, and nickel. Electric vehicle engines rely on rare earths, as do the permanent magnet-based generators inside some wind turbines. Solar panels gobbles up a significant share of the world's supply of tellurium, and gallium, along with a sizable fraction of mined silver and indium. Most renewable technologies demand heaps of copper and aluminum.

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The Dirty Truth About Green Batteries

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    You are not serious about climate change if you fail to include nuclear power as a solution. At least until fusion comes of age.

  • by Kohath ( 38547 )

    If you're not a religious environmentalist, your batteries are not a sin.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Occam's Razor: 95% of climatologists are lying for funds --OR-- Oil executives and uneducated Hannity are full of [bleep]?

  • The main thrust of this article seems to be reminding us that batteries are made up of physical materials, and that these materials have to come from somewhere. Other than that much of the worry seems to be related to the recurrent issue that the supply/demand curves for minerals tend to be hard to predict, since higher prices result in increased prospecting, often leading to unexpected sources. Many of the materials they are discussing simply haven't been in demand long enough to seriously evaluate the glo
    • by ganv ( 881057 )
      Yes, the sources will change. We will also adjust our renewable energy technology to use the resources that turn out to be more cost effective to produce. So far, battery and solar panel prices have fallen quite rapidly in a period when a host of naysayers like the original post were declaring that resource limits would raise prices and prevent us from ever getting even one percent of our automobile production in electric cars. We are now at 1.5% of new cars and rising fast. (250000/17000000). The key
  • When I was a kid I fully expected they would be obsolete by now, not because of peak oil which is at what it's 6th or 7th time it's happened, but because quite simply they would be obsolete by nuclear power.

    Then the people who function on magical thinking stepped in and decided we could power civilization with rainbows and unicorn farts stepped in. Oops, that would be solar and wind. To this day they are still pushing their idiocy no matter how obviously damaging it is.

    Meanwhile, China and India build coal

    • by spitzak ( 4019 )

      It's always funny that all your problems with batteries and electric cars disappear when they are recharged by nuclear power. Or stop being a hypocrite and state"I am in favor of nuclear power and the attacks on batteries are bullsite".
      I also thought nuclear power was a great idea but the failure of it's defenders to refute these lies is making me seriously question the motives of those who like nuclear.

  • Just create a world wide grid to fairly distribute the energy were it is needed.

  • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @04:31PM (#58456356) Journal

    Lithium batteries are great for their high power density and high energy density; They pack a lot of punch into a small, lightweight package. This is great for applications where space and weight are valuable, like mobile electronics or passenger vehicles.

    But if you're building out grid-level energy storage, density is NOT the primary concern. You have plenty of space, and since they're not moving around you aren't concerned about weight either. What you want is low cost and durability.

    Even if we ignore the storage methods that aren't chemical batteries... Compressed gasses, pumped hydro, hydrogen, thermal... we still have lots of options that aren't lithium based. We don't need or want lithium based utility storage.
    =Smidge=

    • by Lehk228 ( 705449 )
      pumped storage, lead acid, nickel iron, and ni-cd is a much more sustainable tech base. NiCD can be handled rough and remains safe and lasts far longer than lithium packs, for medium discharge NiMH has better energy density as long as you don't need it all in a hurry, now that devices are hitting stride on power efficiency rather than just throwing bigger lithium packs in each generation, we ought to start working our way back to longer lifespan batteries, as the two years and it's trash model is totally
      • pumped storage, lead acid, nickel iron, and ni-cd is a much more sustainable tech base.

        No mention of vanadium redox batteries? They have many benefits over the technologies you've listed, and one of the great ones: expandability since the storage id directly proportional to liquid ullage.

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @04:46PM (#58456440) Homepage Journal

    Remember, the dirty pollutants from mining their fuel, having engines that explode (basic power mechanics), and other wear and tear mean fossil fuel vehicles are still way more polluting than electrics. Just delivering their fuel provides a long dirty train of pollution, on the ground, in the sea, in the rivers, and in the air.

    Look at total utility costs.

    A powertrain that needs one new replacement every ten years is a lot less damaging than a powertrain that wears out twice as many parts per year and eventually is scrapped too.

  • For grid storage they should be using flywheels [wikipedia.org] anyway.
  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Thursday April 18, 2019 @05:47PM (#58456758)

    Solar panels gobbles up a significant share of the world's supply of tellurium, and gallium, along with a sizable fraction of mined silver and indium.

    They also use a LOT of sunlight -- leaving less for the rest of us. The more panels we use, the less sunlight we'll have left over for use during the daytime.

    • Not to mention sunburns. Think of the poor old white folks, now dealing with shortages for their tanning beds, after a sunlight spill causes a sunburn, reducing the utility of tanning beds.

      Luckily, here in the West, we're moving to permanent Daylight Savings Time, so we'll have more sunlight, allowing us to both expand solar power while getting more sunlight to use for other things.

    • They also use a LOT of sunlight -- leaving less for the rest of us. The more panels we use, the less sunlight we'll have left over for use during the daytime.

      Yeah but we can fix that with daylight savings time.

      • by Pyramid ( 57001 )

        People who think you can make a rope longer by cutting off one end and attaching it to the other shouldn't be commenting on science and technology. DST and more sunlight...I weep for humanity if/when these kind people gain control.

  • I really wish these people would fuck off and admit they want us to live in mud huts until we go extinct so we can stop listening to them.

  • Since coal is still a huge export for Australia, and an industry that still garners support from a lot of MP's, I wonder whether Oz's coal industry is behind this study in an attempt to pooh-pooh renewable energy.

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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