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Power

Tesla and PG&E To Build World's Largest Battery Farm Near Silicon Valley (cleantechnica.com) 36

"Tesla will work with PG&E to build the world's largest battery facility able to store energy generated by both solar and wind power in Monterey, California," writes long-time Slashdot reader Okian Warrior.

Clean Technica reports: "Certainly, combined, this is going to be the largest battery facility in the world, so it's a big boost to our community and our country," said Monterey County Supervisor John Phillips. Both projects will utilize hundreds of lithium-ion batteries to store clean and renewable energy. They will also use the existing power lines to transmit the energy around Monterey County and parts of Silicon Valley.

Next month, Tesla and PG&E hope to break ground on their project with hopes that it will be completed by the end of this year.

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Tesla and PG&E To Build World's Largest Battery Farm Near Silicon Valley

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  • 1) PG&E is a monopoly
    2) PG&E has threatened to declare bankruptcy
    3) PG&E is apparently leveraging its monopoly position to compete with other businesses (battery manufacturers).

    This seems like an especially bad combo for the public interest.
    • PG&E is a highly regulated monopoly. Nuff said. They are one of the most regulated power companies in the US because of the Enron fiasco.

      • And yet they help burn down large sections of the state and then can shutoff power any time they want. That regulation is really working, obviously. Both power and water regulation in California have been a giant fraud-fest. The 'de-regulation' that made Enron possible was anything but 'de-regulation', political double-speak. Its a shit show all around.

      • The PUC does not regulate PG&E
  • by Socguy ( 933973 ) on Saturday February 29, 2020 @03:48PM (#59782404)
    While this one facility will not suddenly shut down all the thermal generation in California, it is one step in enabling more renewable penetration into the market. As more and more such facilities are constructed and proven, renewables will continue making greater and greater inroads in the energy mix. It wasn't all that long ago that many, many individuals were all over this and other comment boards screaming that the very thing that's going on now was/is impossible.
    • "It wasn't all that long ago that many, many individuals were all over this and other comment boards screaming that the very thing that's going on now was/is impossible."

      In fact, in most stories on energy and/or climate change, they're still doing it, and claiming that only nuclear can solve our energy/pollution problems. I had hoped that the Australian battery would have put a stop to most of that... But it didn't. And sadly, neither will this. The nuclear playboys will simply keep inventing reasons why wh

      • by nojayuk ( 567177 )

        Batteries don't generate electricity, they take in electricity and return it to the grid with some losses, like any other storage system such as pumped hydro.

        There's no real way to compare batteries with generating facilities like non-fossil-carbon nuclear plants except to note that battery installations like this one make solar and wind both more dispatchable and more expensive due to the cost of building and operating the battery systems and also decommissioning them and replacing them at end-of-life.

        By

        • "There's no real way to compare batteries with generating facilities like non-fossil-carbon nuclear plants"

          Sure there is. You compare renewables plus batteries to nuclear plants. And renewables plus batteries produce less CO2 (in construction) and no nuclear waste, yet cost less and are built more rapidly. They're also recyclable or even reusable. (At the end of their supposed service life, solar panels still work, and can be sold on to people who will come and get them so you don't even have to pay shippin

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          The thing with electricity is that generation and consumption must be matched. You don't call the power company to tell them you intend to turn on your air conditioner in an hour so they can plan for it, you just turn it on and the power grid reacts.

          This is easy when there's a lot of "inertia" in the system - if you turn on an air conditioner and need another kilowatt of power, the power company needs to generate another kilowatt of power at the same time. But since it's only reactive, the generators genera

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re "it is one step in enabling" the sale of this and the next battery packs... and then again soon.

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