IDS
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 1, 2001
- 3,290
Almost all forms of electricity generation that extract energy from environmental sources are highly variable in their output, depending on the weather, and in the case of solar, the time of day. As these sources of energy provide a higher proportion of total requirements, either massive storage capacity and/or massive back-up capacity will be required to ensure a reliable supply. For some reason this isn't discussed much, and when it is the focus is usually centralised battery parks and pumped hydro, but it seems to me that there are two sources of distributed storage that could provide a large part of the required storage at much lower additional cost:
1) Facilities such as hospitals require very reliable backup power supplies. It makes sense for energy intensive manufacturing, computing and commercial facilities to also have reliable backup. If every one of these facilities installed additional backup capacity, that could be fed back into the grid when required this could provide a large backup capacity for the whole community.
2) When hybrid electric cars become common the great majority of them at any one time will be sitting either next to their owners' homes, or in public parking facilities at offices, shops, or public transport parking. If the cars could be set to provide short-term supply from their batteries, as well as longer term charging, this would provide a huge short-term backup for supply fluctuations, at little additional cost. For longer term backup the cars' petrol/gas engines could be used to supply the users' home supplies, or even supply the grid.
Is there anything that would make these forms of supply backup impracticable?
If not, what needs to be done to get these systems in place?
Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services
1) Facilities such as hospitals require very reliable backup power supplies. It makes sense for energy intensive manufacturing, computing and commercial facilities to also have reliable backup. If every one of these facilities installed additional backup capacity, that could be fed back into the grid when required this could provide a large backup capacity for the whole community.
2) When hybrid electric cars become common the great majority of them at any one time will be sitting either next to their owners' homes, or in public parking facilities at offices, shops, or public transport parking. If the cars could be set to provide short-term supply from their batteries, as well as longer term charging, this would provide a huge short-term backup for supply fluctuations, at little additional cost. For longer term backup the cars' petrol/gas engines could be used to supply the users' home supplies, or even supply the grid.
Is there anything that would make these forms of supply backup impracticable?
If not, what needs to be done to get these systems in place?
Doug Jenkins
Interactive Design Services