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Epic Changes Are Coming in the Electric Power, Transportation and Energy Storage Sectors

John Petersen, Contributor
March 18, 2011  |  16 Comments

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Epic is the only word I can use to describe an evolving tragedy that killed tens of thousands of people, inflicted hundreds of billions in property damage, destroyed 3.5% of Japan's base-load power generating capacity in a heartbeat and will cause recurring aftershocks in the global electric power, transportation and energy storage sectors for decades. While I'd love to believe the worst is behind us, I fear the times of trouble have just begun.

Since it's clear that Japan will have to turn inward and serve the urgent needs of its own population first, the following direct and immediate impacts seem all but certain:

  • Lost electric power from Japan's ruined nuclear plants must be replaced with oil, natural gas and coal because alternative energy technologies like wind and solar can't possibly take up the slack;
  • Cleanup and reconstruction must increase total Japanese demand for liquid motor fuels;
  • Japanese demand for industrial metals and construction materials must skyrocket; and
  • Crushing limitations on Japan's base-load power generating capacity must:
    • complicate supply chains for equipment, components and materials from Japan;
    • increase the cost of Japanese exports;
    • increase demand for all types of electric efficiency technologies;
    • increase demand for HEVs and other fuel efficiency technologies;
    • increase demand for grid-based energy storage systems; and
    • force utilities to shed non-essential loads and abandon their support for plug-in vehicles.

Some years from now, I expect to see rows of headstones in the EV graveyard that read "Lost to the Tsunami."

While I'm still trying to puzzle my way through the primary, secondary and tertiary impacts, it's a virtual certainty that nuclear power will be immensely unpopular even if things go spectacularly well in Japan. Switzerland has suspended pending applications for two planned nuclear plants and anti-nuclear activists are on the offensive in France. Germany justdeclared a moratorium on nuclear power and ordered the "temporary" cessation of operations at seven reactors that were built before 1980. Other jurisdictions, including earthquake prone California, can expect immense public pressure to follow suit. In time things will stabilize at a new normal, but that new normal will be very different from the normal that existed two weeks ago.

Some readers will be offended by my offhand dismissal of wind and solar as viable solutions. Others will be enraged by the suggestion that utilities will abandon their support for distributed and inherently unpredictable power demand from plug-in vehicles. All I can say is that reality is inconvenient that way. Japan just lost 7.6 gigawatts of base-load capacity. The German moratorium slashed their base-load capacity by 8.3 gigawatts. As the nuclear dominoes continue to fall, the strain on power grids everywhere will get far worse than any of us can begin to imagine. The last thing the world needs in times of plummeting base-load capacity is rapid expansion of demand. We simply can't have it both ways.

Nuclear power plants typically operate at 90% of nameplate capacity while wind and solar operate at something closer to 25% of nameplate.  The nuclear reactors that have recently gone off-line in Japan and Germany accounted for roughly 125 TWh of electricity production last year. In comparison, global electricity production from wind and solar power in 2009 was 269 TWh and 21 TWh, respectively. In other words, we just lost base-load power that represents 43% of the world's renewable electricity output. The gap cannot possibly be filled by new wind and solar power facilities.

There is no question that Japan will be forced to use conventional fossil fuels to replace its destroyed nuclear plants and unless its residents choose to endure extreme hardship for the sake of principle, Germany will be forced to do the same. Comparable power shortages will arise in every industrialized country that decides the risks of vintage nuclear plants outweigh their benefits. When you start stripping base-load power out of the grid, plug-in vehicles become wildly extravagant. My cynical side is tickled that Armageddon Entrepreneurs will finally be forced to choose between stoking fears over (A) imported oil and turmoil in the middle east; (B) global warming; and (C) nuclear power plants. My practical side foresees an immensely difficult time when reality finally sinks in and people are forced to come to grips with their own wasteful behavior. The panacea possibilities were washed away in the tsunami. Now we have to get serious about conservation and abandon the childish notion that we can waste one class of natural resource in the name of conserving another.

Over the last few months the mainstream media has been abuzz with stories about high-profile demonstration projects that will use battery-based systems to help stabilize the grid and smooth power output from wind and solar installations. As usual, the mainstream is getting it wrong and creating expectations the energy storage industry can't possibly meet.

A classic example of overblown media hype is Southern California Edison's plans to spend $55 million to demonstrate a battery-based solution from A123 Systems (AONE) that will provide 32 MW of power and 8 MWh of energy to smooth power output from the Tehachapi wind complex. The following graph from the California ISO highlights the variability issue that's the bane of alternative energy facilities everywhere.
3.16.11 Wind.png
While the new energy storage system will probably do a fine job of smoothing minute-to-minute variability, it will be absolutely worthless in the context of Tehachapi's average daily power production swing of over 200 MW. Tehachapi needs several gigawatt hours of storage, not a few megawatt hours.

I'm convinced that grid-based energy storage is an immense opportunity, but it won't be in the form of the headline grabbing projects the media is fixated on today. Two weeks ago the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory published a review of "Electrochemical Energy Storage for Green Grid" that describes the need for grid-based storage, identifies the leading storage technologies and explains the baseline economic requirements. Copies of the PNNL review are available from the American Chemical Society for $35. If you own stock in a battery company or are thinking about investing in one, it's the best $35 you'll ever spend.

In their discussion of storage economics, the authors said:

"Cost is probably the most important and fundamental issue of EES for a broad market penetration. Among the most important factors are capital cost and life-cycle cost. The capital cost is typically expressed in terms of the unit cost of power ($/kW) for power applications (e.g., frequency regulation) or the unit cost of energy capacity ($/kWh) for energy applications (e.g., load leveling). The life-cycle cost is the unit cost of energy or power per cycle over the lifetime of the unit.

...  In the authors' opinion, the cost of electricity storage probably needs to be comparable to the cost of generating electricity, such as from natural gas turbines at a cost as low as 8-10 ¢/kWh per cycle. Thus, to be competitive, the capital cost of storage technologies for energy applications should be comparable or lower than $250/kWh, assuming a life cycle of 15 years or 3900 cycles (5 cycles per week), an 80% round trip efficiency, and “zero” maintenance. A capital cost of $1,250/kW or less is desired if the technology can last 5 h at name-tag power. ..."

A123's demonstration project at Tehachapi will cost $1,720 per kW and $6,880 per kWh for a 15 minute solution. It's a highly profitable project for A123, but light-years from cost-effective. The same is true of another high profile project where Ener1 (HEV) will sell power quality systems with a combined capacity of 3 MW and 5 MWh to the Russian Federal Gridfor $40 million, or $13,300 per kW and $8,000 per kWh. These projects are great headline events, but they'll never be the basis for a sustainable business.

In February and March of last year I wrote a series of articles that focused on grid-based storage. The first summarized a study titled "Energy Storage for the Electricity Grid: Benefits and Market Potential Assessment Guide" that was commissioned by the DOE's Energy Storage Systems Program and conducted by Jim Eyer and Garth Corey. For that article, I calculated an average economic benefit for each of the 17 grid-scale storage applications discussed in the report and then used those averages to calculate the potential demand in MWh, the potential economic benefit per kWh and the potential revenue opportunity for storage system manufacturers. The following table summarizes my results.



The color coding is simply my attempt to separate high-value applications that need objectively cool technologies like flywheels, supercapacitors and lithium ion batteries from low-value applications that need objectively cheap solutions like flow batteries, lead-acid batteries, compressed air and pumped hydro. The bottom line is that revenue opportunities in grid-based storage will be 90% cheap, 8% cool and 2% in-between. Any way you cut it, the lion's share of the revenue opportunity will flow to companies that manufacture objectively cheap storage solutions. There will be niche markets in the $1 billion to $6 billion range for cool technologies like flywheels, supercapacitors and lithium ion batteries, but those niche markets will pale in comparison to the opportunities for cheap energy storage.

Until last week, I believed global demand for grid-based storage would ramp slowly over the course of a decade. Today it's beginning to look like grid-scale storage will rapidly eclipse all other potential markets. The universe of companies that can effectively respond to urgent global needs for large-scale storage is very small. It includes General Electric (GE), Enersys (ENS), Exide Technologies (XIDE), and C&D Technologies (CHHPD.PK)  in the established manufacturer ranks, and Axion Power International (AXPW.OB) and ZBB Energy (ZBB) in the emerging technology ranks. Companies like A123, Ener1, Active Power (ACPW), Beacon Power (BCON) and Altair Nanotechnologies (ALTI) will undoubtedly have exciting revenue opportunities, but the cost of their products will exclude them from the competitive mainstream.

In November of 2008 I wrote, "what I initially described as a rising tide is now looking more like an investment tsunami as a handful of micro-cap and small-cap companies gear up to compete for $50 to $70 billion of rapidly developing annual demand for large format energy storage systems." While it took a real tsunami to bring things to a head, I'm more convinced than ever that every company that brings a cost-effective energy storage product to market over the next few years will have more demand than it can possibly handle. EVs may be dead men walking but grid-scale storage looks like the opportunity of a lifetime.

Disclosure: Author is a former director of Axion Power International (AXPW.OB) and holds a substantial long position in its common stock.

This article was originally published on AltEnergyStocks.com and was reprinted with permission.

16 Comments

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Lawrence Carroll
Lawrence Carroll
April 5, 2011
Hey Bob Wallace.

I agree with you %100. The UCS is a great organization. I love their moderate, level headed attitude, not only in their analysis of nuclear subsidies that you mentioned, but also on issues that they've taken on in the past, such as how SUVs could easily be made much more fuel efficient using "off-the-shelf" technologies such as five (or six) speed automatic transmissions (among many other simple methods that they brought up). Autos don't have to be either significantly more expensive, nor necessarily hybrids to get better mileage.

I haven't read the Harvard study, but I'll do a search. I certainly am against for mountain removal or spreading mercury and other toxins everywhere!

A ground-source heat pump is a great idea, and my solar installer (a great fellow!) is planning on being a licensed installer soon after he finishes his certification. Right now I get all my own heat (including hot water) from wood from my own land that I cut and haul myself (using a Taylor "waterstove," and using an electric ATV), but as I get older and less inclined to do quite so much physical labor, I will probably get a ground-source system eventually.

I love my 6kw grid-tie system too!

Take care and enjoy! :)
Lawrence Carroll
Lawrence Carroll
April 4, 2011
Hey Bob Wallace. Thanks for your comment to my post.

You are right about energy being cheaper for some, especially those in third world countries where transporting fuel, like kerosine, was (and is) a huge hassle, not to mention a rather smelly substance to burn!

Of course, that just proves mine (and your) point in a way since those in such compromised positions are far more appreciative of energy as a more precious commodity that so many here who take it for granted and thus waste much more.

I think of the way we look upon recent innovaters in say, refrigeration, where (in cooler climates or seasons) either pump the refrigerant into an outside loop and let the environment cool it, or have fans that blow cool air from the outside when the weather permits, rather than running the energy guzzling compressor 365 days a year.

If we had simply "done what was wise and right" in this regard from the beginning because it was wise (rather than always thinking about whether or not we NEEDED to do it), even when fossil fuels seemed less damaging, then it would have been the established paradigm or tradition, and building design would have quickly changed to accomodate the tubing necessary to perform this "refrigerator helper" technology routinely.

Thus not only in refrigeration, but in a million other ways, we would have been thrifty and ingenious rather than "dumb and wasteful" in our technology and energy use.

Remember that there were manufacturers of gasoline/electric cars even back in the tin-lizzie days, and economy cars, like the VW Beetle, or the Renault 10 etc. were quite popular in the sixties and seventies. Gigantic SUVs and pickups were not the norm then, but rather were used by those who really needed them (and not just because of their remarkable girth).

But hey, Bob, I know you already champion such things, but it is such a joy to talk about such things!
ANONYMOUS
April 3, 2011
Bob W
I understand why rapid chargers are desirable but they are not practical for 15 minute charges. Using my example for a 30KWHh battery needing a full charge you would need at least 0000 AWG wire which is rated for 380A. A 10 ft. wire length would loose almost 1900 watts of heat charging a battery. The wire could become fairly warm and would be pretty heavy since each conductor is 0.46" in diameter (if solid). This makes rapid charging impractical. There are also considerations of switch contacts and large wire or bus bar sizes in the cars which add cost and weight.
As for using higher voltages, that is a possible solution but since the batteries are around 277 VDC you would be faced with power conversion problems and cost in the car. Ain't gonna happen.
Lawrence Carroll
Lawrence Carroll
April 3, 2011
"My practical side foresees an immensely difficult time when reality finally sinks in and people are forced to come to grips with their own wasteful behavior. The panacea possibilities were washed away in the tsunami. Now we have to get serious about conservation and abandon the childish notion that we can waste one class of natural resource in the name of conserving another."

I love this. While there are parts of this article I find polemical, this exceprt is a gem. Energy is not a "freebie" and never will be; it is not something people should ever take for granted, though they have for at least the past century.
ANONYMOUS
April 2, 2011
Mega (or very fast) chargers for EVs are not practical. Current (amps)requirements to charge a 30 KWh battery in 15 minutes (not counting losses) would be 433 amps at 277 VDC. Losses on copper cables are I^2 x R. Over night or workplace parking lot charging makes more sense but the idea of controlled load demand at night seems by far the best way.
Garth Barker
Garth Barker
March 24, 2011
Grid barriers in the electric industry have slowed the integration of energy storage into the system. Though numerous government studies have singled out the benefits of storage, there has only been a cursory effort to assign a dollar value and market position for that value. This is changing as more intermittent renewable energy is built and security and balancing issues become apparent. As the ancillary and integration benefits of storage are more widely understood, renewable energy developers will place more value on storage. Without a market value in place or any plans to develop one, the inevitable addition of storage as a transmission/generation/load tool will be a rough transition.
Glenn Doty
Glenn Doty
March 21, 2011
Bob,

Again, we don't disagree on small tremors. I will state adamantly that I don't give a damn about tremors on the order of ~3 or under. My doubts lie in whether there's any reason to believe that increased drilling activity would alleviate a big quake.

To put it into perspective, it would take 100,000 tremors measuring 3.0 to release the same amount of energy that would be released in the quake that hit Japan two weeks ago. So the theory that drilling would alleviate big quakes relies on the assumption that multiple, dozens, or even hundreds of tiny tremors would result from every major drilling project. My postulate is that the tremors caused by drilling offset the daily minor tremors, and the net release over time is the same... leading to the same buildup of pressure which trigger the big ones.

But again, I've seen no data nor simulations showing one way or another... and I can hardly claim that geology is my expertise - it's not. I don't know.

I would assume that if fracking is the direct cause of the tremors, then we will indeed cause far more tremors than background average... because any well that requires fracking - be it natural gas or enhanced geothermal - needs to undergo constant re-fracking over the lifetime of the project, so there really may be hundreds of minor quakes for every well dug.

I will say that I do know the economics behind geothermal, and it is only economical in very specific regions. We hope to improve the economics, but we aren't deployment ready yet.

But I agree with you that there's nothing to fear from geothermal, and wherever it is economical it should be built out.
Glenn Doty
Glenn Doty
March 21, 2011
Bob,

You are, of course, correct about the non-destructive nature of minor tremors caused by drilling...

But the discussions concerning minor tremors relieving major earthquakes is a postulate that was put forward without mathematical support. To my knowledge it was an issue of non-peer reviewed speculation that most of the geological community discredits.

I would love to be wrong here, and I didn't do much digging. If there is some peer-reviewed simulation support for the notion of minor tremors releasing geological stresses, that would be something that would be VERY interesting to read.

If that proves to have merit, it would give a strong external benefit for all of California to drill thousands upon thousands of wells... making their marginal cost of geothermal quite low.
Allen Green
Allen Green
March 21, 2011
@todd, I am saying that with as many earthquakes as Japan has the likelihood that another large earthquake, maybe not 9.0 like the last one, but possibly 7+ will occur if they drill near a fault like was done in Switzerland. While that may be a risk that Japan is willing to take, I personally do not know and am not the one who will make that decision.

Also, someone may determine that drilling more slowly or drilling in another manner will not cause seismic activity. If that is the case, then we should see many more geothermal power plants set up in places such as Japan, Indonesia, Western U.S. and other areas of the world with higher temperatures near the surface.
Glenn Doty
Glenn Doty
March 21, 2011
John,

You are unfortunately making the same mistake that the other analysts make in assuming that the answer MUST be grid-to-grid.

For wind - the most affordable renewable energy - the true problem is overcapacity. Renewable energy cannot penetrate because additional capacity in renewables will be met with problems of overcapacity in off-peak markets, where the choice must be dropping baseload power (which is risky because if the wind lulls then baseload cannot quickly respond), or simply pitching the turbines out of the wind or wasting the excess energy.

But stability can be achieved by having variable DEMAND, which can instantly adjust based on the needs of the grid. This allows baseload power to gradually tamp down and gradually ramp back up, while the demand fluctuates in real time to the markets.

It is cheaper to build out FOUR TIMES as much capacity in wind and allow variable demand to address the intermittency issues at zero cost then it would be to try to stabilize the grid for increased wind build-out and eliminate the fossil back-up. Hence you could abate far more fossil energy for the same price. One of these options could be market driven, the other would ALWAYS represent a severe cost to the consumers.

Please review novel technologies that transfer electrical energy to liquid fuels while reviewing the potential for grid energy storage. One of these has a far greater market potential than the other...

http://www.dotyenergy.com/Economics/Econ_Stabilizing_RenewableGrid.htm

http://www.dotyenergy.com/PDFs/Doty-90377-Storage-ASME-ES10.pdf

If you want to look ahead to market trends that will offer great investment returns, you cannot restrict your technology analysis to those technologies that have been (over) invested in since the 1970's.

Novel technology could change the market rapidly. Ignoring disruptive technology in favor of the "safe bet" of established technology has NEVER benefited an investment decision.

www.WindFuels.com
Todd Flach
Todd Flach
March 19, 2011
Hi gtwhitegold @4, I think the problem in Japan is big earthquakes. They have 3.4 magnitude earthquakes weekly or monthly, which cause no damage or panic because they are normal for their area. They would gladly live with lots of little tremors like a 3.4 if it meant they never had a 9.0 like last week. So your point about geothermal was again?
James Davis
James Davis
March 19, 2011
The author of this article has never heard of mega chargers that can charge electric cars in 15 minutes or less, has he? Japan was the first to come out with the mega charger for the Toyota...or maybe it was the Leaf.

Japan's population is not 3 or 4 hundred million like America and they can build one mega geothermal power plant (not over any faults) with at least 10 turbines and produce enough electricity to supply all their needs for the next 1.5 million years. Why would they want to endanger themselves again with building or rebuilding fossil fuel power plants?
Allen Green
Allen Green
March 19, 2011
Considering how a 3.4 earthquake was near the drilling site in Basel, Switzerland and was associated with the drilling by the Swiss government, I doubt that Japan wants to get involved with it considering possible ramifications weather or it is proved that the drilling caused the earthquake.
Todd Flach
Todd Flach
March 19, 2011
Although I share the concern of John for the victims in Japan, I agree with JamesDavis that Japan should strive to maximize its use of indigenous renewables, particularly geothermal, which Japan has a huge resource of. Why is this option not more developed in Japan, of all places where it would appear everything is in favor of geothermal?
Alan Beattie
Alan Beattie
March 18, 2011
You know, Petersen, you've been beating the same tired drum of lead-acid batteries for years, during which time the cost of solar pv has decreased ~70%.

Additionally, you simply don't have an clear understanding of the exponential solar growth curve in relationship to the inexorable increase in the price of all, yes all, fossil fuels over the next 5-10 years.

Godspeed the poor people of Japan, but any so-called "Nuclear Renaissance" was already DOA far before the tragic events of the past week -- it never had a chance, due to cost and time, and it has always been "one phone call away" from being another 30 year scourge.

So that leaves us with...

Ah, intermittency, you might say -- the Achilles heel of many renewables. Between new efficiencies, demand response (think computers) and a "Manhattan Project" type rush to refine/bring both distribution and grid level storage to the table (the economic incentives represent the most compelling investment opportunity of the Millennium), the writing is on the wall. Short of the Koch brothers being elected President and VP. BTW, most of the promising new storage technologies have passed "proof of concept" and are rushing to attain cost reduction and commercial scale, but this is not like nuclear fusion, which has been an order of magnitude away since my father worked at Brookhaven 40 years ago.

Bottom line, sir, is that this isn't your parent's renewable energy nor your parent's cheap fossil fuel charged world, going forward. 15 years from now folks will look back at lead-acid technology with the same fondness that they currently remember the slide-rule.
James Davis
James Davis
March 18, 2011
Was it just an overlook, or did you intentionally leave out Geothermal, Hydropower, Ocean and River Energy. There is a solar power plant in, I think, Arizona that produces as mush power as a nuclear power plant does. Why can't Japan just build geothermal or hydro power plants to replace their frightfully dangerous nuclear power plants? They have volcanoes in Japan, so Geothermal would be perfect there. They don't have to go back to fossil fuel or give up their transition to electric vehicles just because they have to replace their deadly nuclear power plants.

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John Petersen

John Petersen

John works as a partner in the firm of Fefer Petersen & Co (www.ipo-law.com) and represents North American, European and Asian clients, principally in the energy and alternative energy sectors. His international practice is limited to corporate...
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