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Advancing Renewable Energy Storage Technologies

By Scott Sklar
September 6, 2006   |   14 Comments

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In the immediate future, vast new renewable energy sources from wind, solar, and geothermal power generation must be added to gas, coal, hydroelectric and nuclear sources of the present. The new "Smart Electric Grid" must improve efficiency by 50% or more in order for this power technology revolution to be affordable.

--Scott Sklar
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The information and views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on its Web site and other publications.

14 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 14
September 6, 2006
http://www.vrbpower.com/

No I don't own shares in it. Already shipping. Can do 90% discharge, recharge cycles 10,000 times. Has a electrolyte that can store electricity without degradation for years.

This is a huge leap from any other battery technology.
Comment
2 of 14
September 6, 2006
'Flow batteries' may be the answer, especially where where wind energy is concerned. A storage system able to supply 12 megawatt-hours of electricity is to be supplied to a 39 mw wind farm in Ireland. See http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1157321706744&call_pageid=968350072197&col=969048863851
Comment
3 of 14
September 7, 2006
The answer to this question is that the USA & Europe & Japan needs to come together to form an international research effort to create an ultra cheap, highly reusable battery technology -- something like the carbon nanotube enhanced ultracapacitor MIT LEES lab is working on.

The Iter budget is about 10 billion. I think this is worth at least that.

At the same time, a team can be created to find an ultra cheap solar cell.

With these two things mass produced everywhere, our energy & climate issues will be history.
Comment
4 of 14
September 8, 2006
Gene -

You are right about solar power. California's lead for a million rooftops is awesome news. Hopefully solar cells (as well as inverters) will get cheap soon.

There is so much we could be doing right now. The US Govt. should be subsidizing wind turbine manufacturers in this country now. We need lots of turbines & it doesn't make sense to buy them from Germany & Denmark. Europe's long time subsidies of wind have made them years ahead of us in manufacturing base required. We can leapfrog them by coming up with cheap ways to deploy wind into deeper offshore areas.

Folks, lets not discount the idea of cheap batteries / ultra - capacitors. A city of a million plugged in cars is one great big distributed, multiply redundant buffer / storage mechanism for itermittent wind / solar production. V2G -- its a very good idea.

Matt
Comment
5 of 14
September 8, 2006
On the contrary, the main need for more electrical power is for peak power for air conditioning (about 30%), which is most needed when the sun is at its zenith. There is lots of base power already - we shut off the natural gas turbines at night. So we actually don't have to store most of the solar energy we need.

I look forward to the development of direct solar-thermal trough-to-heat exchanger technology, which will bypass the grid altogether. The 270 degree-C fluid could go directly into high-efficiency heat exchangers, which would produce the cooling air.
Comment
6 of 14
September 8, 2006
Every week I see another crop mentioned as the pick for a biofuel future. Corn, soy, rapeseed, jathropa, carmelina, palm oil, algae, switch grass and fast growing poplar.

I like the idea of a solar methanol farm near Tucson. Each meter can make 300 kWh per year. Electrolysis can produce hydrogen at a rate of 1 kilogram per 50 kilowatt hours. So the output of the farm would be around 40,000 gallons per year compared to 75 net gallons for an acre of corn to ethanol. Doesn't compete with food, no fertilizers, CO2 neutral, storable, scalable and 100 times more productive than any crop to fuel scenarios. I realize this idea is 20 times too expensive currently but once solar gets down to 5 cents per kWh the idea starts looking reasonable.
Comment
7 of 14
September 8, 2006
There is no one universal storage method that applies to all applications. All methods have merits and drawbacks. The answer is to educate decision makers with all the options so a smart storage method can be applied to each situation. Efficiencies of each storage method should be considered as there will always be losses incurred to store energy.
Comment
8 of 14
September 8, 2006
Solar and wind to hydrogen via electrolysis. Hydrogen and CO2 to methanol. We can also make NG and CO2 into methanol in situations where shipping the NG isn't practical. We can use the methanol in fuel cells, heaters, ICEs or as a chemical feedstock.

This scenario seems appropriate for wind power in outback and off-shore situations where distance from the grid is an issue. Ethanol is getting all the press but CH3OH could be the choice.
Comment
9 of 14
September 8, 2006
Hey Scott,
Your response to Ian P.egarding energy storage mentions a company called Cobysis, that is producing a 3.6kw battery appliance. The link you provided to Advanced Battery Technology has no reference to Cobysis, and a search of their site came up not found. Do you by chance have any further info on Cobysis?
Thanks!
Comment
10 of 14
September 8, 2006
Having searched for many years for an energy storage method, every submission to the ETSU (that was) has dismissed the proposition as uneconomic.
However using lateral thinking a system has been devised that cannot be dismissed in this manner.
The use of waste or redundant products combined to provide vast energy storage.
Labour can be provided by utilising prison inmates to give them a worthwhile purpose to life.
Anyone interested contact me
richard@hamsterbaskets.co.uk
Comment
11 of 14
September 10, 2006
As that proverbial "snowball" rolls downhill there is always hope that it will crash harmlessly into a boulder or something but there could just as easily be a time in the event that will let the viewer know that it is on a collision course that it will destroy something very important.
For mankind I believe that day will be when methane hydrates from the oceans floor are harvested for energy consumption. If indeed they are not already and we just dont know about it yet. Funny how the invention of the microturbine generator coincided with the ending of the law that kept natural gas from being burn for the production of electricity for profit at the same time methane hydrates were discovered. Paranoia? Possibly, but look at what we have to loose. Wouldnt you be paranoid?
Comment
12 of 14
September 10, 2006
What about absitnence?

Considering that world human population has tripled in just the last 60 years and that the beginnings of this coincided with the advent of electric utilization as well as automotive transportation, would you agree that the proverbial "snowball" has been started on its journey down hill?
Getting larger and larger as it rolls until that inevitable day when it will crash into something at the bottom.
Is the problem the inability to produce enough energy for mankind or is the problem the demand for energy from an ever inflating mankind? If we are to believe that E=mc2, will there be anything left of Earth once we have turned it all into energy?
Comment
13 of 14
September 11, 2006
All of these exotic concepts maybe valid but they will not solve the problem. FoxC Inc. has patented a method of extracting much greater heat from the Sun, a method of storing the excess heat in water and a simple way of returning some of this stored energy back to the production cycle as needed at night or on rainy days. We can operate for a 6-8 week period without any Sunshine if needed. The non polluting nature of water along with it's high specific boiling point make it the perfect heat storage medium. We are a member of ACORE and are presently negotiating with the IFC of the World bank. Getting funding in the USA is much more difficult for small companies with very limited resources even when you have a patented proven solution. But it will happen and our "Cheap Clean and Green Energy" project will profoundly change the market and the world, and all other forms of fossil and Nuclear production and pollution will be Obsolete. Isn't it about time.
Comment
14 of 14
September 14, 2006
Mike from Sept. 8th:

Your query about "Cobysis" can be answered thus: Cobasys is a joint venture company between Energy Conversion Devices (ECD) and ChevronTexaco. It is based in Auburn Hills, Michigan. The plant in Springsboro, Ohio that Cobasys built, assembles ECD's patented, licensed Nickel Metal Hydride batteries for HEVs and EVs. They do not, however, to my knowledge, make a 3.6 kW appliance battery. I believe that reference was to another company in the same category.
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Scott Sklar

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About: Scott, founder and president of The Stella Group, Ltd., in Washington, DC, is the Chair of the Steering Committee of the Sustainable Energy Coalition and serves... more »

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